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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63307 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63307)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Untamed, by George Pattullo
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Untamed
-
-Author: George Pattullo
-
-Illustrator: Charles Bull
- Charles Russell
- Haydon Jones
-
-Release Date: September 26, 2020 [EBook #63307]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNTAMED ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mardi Desjardins & the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-
-
-
-
- The Untamed
-
-[Illustration: “_So much had three days with the wild linked up the
-slack chain of her blood tie._”--_Shiela_]
-
-
-
-
- The Untamed
- Range Life in the Southwest
-
- By
- George Pattullo
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Toronto
- McLeod & Allen
- 1911
-
-
-
-
- Copyright 1908, 1909, 1910 by THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
- Copyright 1910 by THE S. S. MCCLURE COMPANY
- Copyright 1911 by THE PHILLIPS PUBLISHING COMPANY
- Copyright 1911 by DESMOND FITZGERALD, INC.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- FRANK B. MOSON
- and the boys of the O R, R O, and Turkey Track
-
-
-
-
- My coffee I boil without being ground.
- The fire I kindle with chips gathered round.
- My books are the brooks, my sermons the stones;
- My parson’s a wolf on pulpit of bones.
- The sky is my ceiling; my carpet’s the grass;
- My music’s the lowing of herds as they pass.
- --_Ballad of The Trail Boss._
-
-
-
-
- Acknowledgment is made to _The Saturday Evening Post_,
- _McClure’s Magazine_, and _The American Magazine_ for permission
- to republish these stories.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- I OL’ SAM A mule 13
-
- II THE MARAUDER A coyote 51
-
- III CORAZÓN A roping horse 83
-
- IV THE OUTLAW A steer 112
-
- V SHIELA A wolfhound 142
-
- VI MOLLY A range cow 173
-
- VII THE BABY AND THE Mountain lion 202
- PUMA
-
- VIII THE MANKILLER A jack 230
-
- IX NEUTRIA A mountain cowhorse 257
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- “So much had three days with the _Frontispiece_
- wild linked up the slack chain of
- her blood tie”
-
- _Facing Page_
- “What you mean by running off this 48
- a-way?”
-
- “The wolf drove away a couple of 60
- buzzards and fell upon this
- savagely”
-
- “Leaping, with legs stiff, straight 100
- off the ground”
-
- “On his hind legs, his worn fangs 170
- gleaming, he received her”
-
- “The lonely hut was untenanted” 240
-
-
-
-
- I
- OL’ SAM
-
-
-“Git your nose out’n that pot. Hi, you flop-eared--I swan, that ol’ mule
-makes me mad sometimes. He’d jist as leave snake your whole batch right
-from under your nose as look at you. Git, you long-legged rascal!
-Whoopee!”
-
-The cook dashed at the offender, swinging a bit of firewood. It struck
-the hybrid upon the hindquarter and he countered instantaneously by
-lashing out with his heels. Then he turned to smell of the projectile,
-but finding it unfit for consumption, trotted off up a neighboring rise
-and presently disappeared from view.
-
-Certain coarse men of the Lazy L outfit called him Hell-on-Wheels, among
-other things, but his real name was Sam, and he made one of the
-four-mule team that hauled the chuck-wagon during round-up. Between him
-and Dave was a personal feud; they were most loving enemies. In the
-beginning the cook had pampered him by feeding bread to the big
-creature, taking no heed, and now this artificial appetite he had
-created made of Dave’s waking hours a perpetual vigil and conjured up
-nightmares in place of refreshing sleep.
-
-For whenever Sam wasn’t doing the major share of hauling some four
-thousand odd pounds of wagon, bedding and provisions from one round-up
-ground to another, he was loafing on the confines of camp, awaiting a
-favorable opportunity to go in surreptitiously and nose among the pots
-or at the back of the wagon for the buns Dave made so cunningly. What
-time he lost this way from grazing he made up easily by his pillage;
-bread is very fattening, and then, of course, the chuck-wagon team
-received regular rations of corn.
-
-Yet Dave was a watchful scoundrel, and day by day it was being borne in
-upon Sam that in these attempts at pilfering he received blows and abuse
-more often than huns. But at night, when the punchers lay asleep on the
-ground and he could hear the cook slumbering stertorously beneath the
-wagon-fly, it was different: then Sam would wander into camp and make
-his way on soundless feet to the dead fire. Beside its ashes he knew
-there would be scraps of bread, perhaps some of them sweetened with
-molasses, and for these his whole being craved. On one such excursion,
-as he munched happily on a wet crust, he inadvertently put his foot into
-Dave’s face, and, because Hell-on-Wheels weighed about thirteen hundred
-pounds, the cook awoke very peevish.
-
-“If it wasn’t,” he remarked next morning as he hitched up--“if it wasn’t
-that you could haul more’n them other three put together, I’d skin you
-alive. Oh, you needn’t go for to pretend you didn’t do it a-purpose. You
-seen me there, all right. Look at that lip! Don’t it look as if I’d fell
-off’n a mountain?”
-
-The cook always knew what to expect of Sam. When putting the mules in
-the wagon he was cognizant of the precise moment that Sam would kick,
-and could judge to a hair’s breadth at what angle the smashing blow
-would be delivered. On his part, Sam knew that the cook was prepared;
-otherwise it is doubtful whether he would have let go some of the
-vicious side-sweeps of his left leg that he did. On occasions when the
-attacks were especially wicked, or when Dave calculated the margin of
-safety with too fine nicety, he would possess himself of a stout club
-and hammer Hell-on-Wheels until he was weak. In this way were bred
-mutual respect and a thorough understanding.
-
-It was when the wagon was miring down, or when they were climbing a
-rocky trail in the mountains, that Sam and the cook gloried one in the
-other. Once Dave’s judgment went wrong by three inches in fording a
-stream--he may have been careless with a splendid contempt, as was his
-habit--and one hind wheel sank oozily into quicksand. The cook stood up
-and whirled his long whip and adjured his team by all that was holy to
-pull, pull, pull.
-
-“Now, you, Hell-on-Wheels! Good ol’ boy! You, Sam! You!”
-
-He lashed three of the team with stinging force, but Sam he did not
-touch. The great mule laid his shoulders into the collar and
-heaved,--heaved again--and with a wrench and a sucking sound they
-floundered out to hard sand, to safety. Whenever Sam came to a
-realization that the job required something extra, and stretched himself
-out accordingly, either the wagon followed where he wanted to go or the
-mule went through his harness.
-
-The wagon boss esteemed Sam and valued him at his worth, but it cannot
-be said that he was fond of the beast. There was much in his personality
-Uncle Henry did not like. Nor did the horse-wrangler. Had anybody
-requested Maclovio for a frank opinion of Sam, the Mexican would have
-spat with contempt and exhausted the resources of his patois. That
-nerveless limb of the devil? Don’t try to tell him the mule stampeded
-the staked horses by accident; Maclovio knew better; Sam had planned the
-whole turmoil from the start of the round-up. The wrangler had to herd
-the mules with the remuda, and the uncanny sagacity the drag-mule
-displayed in following out his own plans of grazing and enjoyment filled
-the Mexican with superstitious dread.
-
-The ropers hated him with an active, abiding hatred they made no effort
-to conceal. He was the only member of the wagon team that would not
-submit to be caught without roping. The other mules would trot in with
-the horses from pasture and walk quietly to the wagon to be bridled,
-under the lure of grain; but not so with the big fellow. Sam never
-crowded away among the horses in foolish panic when a roper walked
-through the remuda toward him: that was the way the cow-ponies did,
-struggling blindly to get beyond range, and so the noose fell about
-their necks with ridiculous ease. That was not Sam’s method, he being
-temperamentally opposed to panic. He waited until the roper approached,
-waited until the coil sped toward him; and then only did he dodge. As a
-result, he eluded the noose time after time. In fact, it always took
-longer to rope Sam than any five of the hundred horses.
-
-One day the hawk-eyed autocrat of the Lazy L range spurred into camp in
-hot haste while the outfit was partaking of dinner. Heatedly he urged:
-“Watch your horses Uncle Henry.” Then he went to the fire, filled a tin
-plate with beef and beans, and a cup with coffee, and speared a bun.
-
-“Shore. But what for special? They’re doing well and we ain’t lost one,”
-replied the wagon boss, making room for his chief on the shady spot
-where he squatted.
-
-“Then you’re in luck. That band of mustangs has roamed down here from
-the Flying W. They passed within two miles of the ranch yesterday and,
-by Jupiter, if ol’ Pete didn’t join ’em. The ol’ fool! Eleven years that
-horse has been a cowhorse and now he runs off from the home pasture with
-a bunch of wild ones.”
-
-“Where’re they heading?”
-
-“You know as much as I do. I reckon the pasture is poor on the Flying W,
-don’t you? They ain’t had much rain and probably this bunch’ll make for
-the mountains. Better watch out,” the manager admonished.
-
-Dave toiled with his team next afternoon through a waste of sand and
-mesquite. It was very hot--had there been such a thing as a thermometer
-on the wagon it would have registered better than 112--and he sat
-hunched on the seat, occasionally throwing an encouraging word to the
-straining mules. Behind came Al with the hoodlum wagon, which, being
-much lighter, made easy work for a pair of stout horses, so that Al
-dozed with his hat well down over his eyes and dreamed of a dress-maker
-in Doghole. It was growing towards sunset and they would pitch camp in
-the foothills and have supper ready for the boys before darkness fell.
-
-Without warning the mule team stopped and stood at gaze, rousing Dave
-abruptly. A dense cloud of dust was bearing down on them from the right
-and out of that swirl came the muffled pounding of many hoofs.
-
-“The remuda’s stompeded,” yelled Al.
-
-“No, they ain’t. No, they ain’t. It’s them wild horses. Git your gun,
-Al, quick!”
-
-By the time Al had reached behind him with one hand to fumble for the
-rifle, the band had swept by and was disappearing. Probably there were
-thirty horses in it, but that was only a guess, because Dave obtained
-nothing more than a glimpse of streaming manes and tails. They ran
-compactly, a noble buckskin in the lead, and tailing the band was a
-white horse; it was evident that he held the furious pace only by a
-supreme effort.
-
-“There goes ol’ Pete. Blast him, if he ain’t hitting only the high
-spots,” Dave bawled.
-
-At this moment his attention was called to Sam. The mule’s head was
-thrown high, the usually slouching ears were rigid and pricked forward,
-and he was sniffing the air restlessly. Once he made an abrupt lurch
-sideways as though to follow the free rovers, but the bit sawed his
-mouth, the collar and traces bound him and he could only champ
-impatiently. If a mule really knows how to tremble, Sam was trembling
-then--it was more a twitching of the muscles. The band was lost to sight
-and sound. Dave called a raucous command and once more they settled to
-work. Again Sam became listless and applied himself lethargically to
-pulling.
-
-A cool breeze whipped among the scrub-cedar of the foothills and went
-whining down the valley. Above the black rim of El Toro rose a rich,
-golden disc. Its pale light softened the outlines of the forms asleep
-upon the ground; in that kindly radiance the chuck-wagon and the
-unsightly confusion of camp merged into blurs that harmonized with the
-giant shadow of the mountain. The night was full of murmurings, tense
-with the suggestion of strange other worlds. Surely the plaintive
-wailing the breeze bore to Sam from El Toro’s pines was a message.
-
-He stood with his nose up wind and drew in the scents of the wilds. His
-forelegs were hobbled, the rope twisted about them so tightly that he
-could barely shuffle when he grazed, and near at hand twelve horses were
-staked out. One of them, hopelessly entangled in his rope, was fighting
-it in terror; already he was on his knees unable to do aught but cut
-himself. In a draw a half-mile away the remuda cropped the grass under
-the eyes of a triple guard, for Uncle Henry was mindful of the manager’s
-warning, and upon Dave’s report he took no chances.
-
-Out from the shadow cast by a mesquite bush a coyote skulked, and Sam
-snorted and shook his head in anger. The beast’s scent offended him, but
-he was not afraid. Somewhere in the dark a wildcat cried and the mule
-cocked his ears to listen. Next moment he jumped awkwardly aside as a
-polecat scurried by on a hunt for food.
-
-The mule was growing restive. It was not nervousness--a mule is rarely
-nervous or frightened. When he runs away or pitches or balks, it is
-seldom because something has put fear into him; it is refined
-cussedness. Anyone who ever succeeded in owning a mule longer than a
-month will tell you that.
-
-Of a sudden Sam sank his head and his powerful teeth met and rasped on
-the rope that chafed his legs. One of the strands parted and he strained
-to break the hobble, but too impatient to direct his gnawing to one
-spot, he was unsuccessful and finally desisted.
-
-Was that the call of a horse? It did not come from the direction in
-which the remuda had been driven off, and his ears tingled for a
-repetition of the sound. Twice he humped himself and struck out with his
-heels in the fury of impotence, and paused breathlessly with his eyes
-fixed on the yellow ball above El Toro’s summit. He took one step
-forward and became immovable as his glance fell to the wide lane of
-light it cast.
-
-Down this silver-shimmering path a horse came proudly. None but a free
-rover ever trod earth as he did. Sam could see the fiery eyes flashing
-suspicion, the regal head thrown back, the nostrils a-quiver to divine
-danger. He came like a phantom, lightly as one, silently as one, and a
-dozen yards away he halted, and there in the light of the moon surveyed
-the camp, the staked mounts, the sleeping men. It was the king of the
-wild horses. Far back of him a blotch on a hillside shifted with gleam
-of color.
-
-A madness was come upon Sam. From out the night countless voices called
-to him appealingly; away out there in the illusive sheen must be liberty
-and delight. His sluggish blood was racing wildly, his body and limbs
-were a-quake with eagerness to respond to that appeal, to be gone into
-that alluring gloom. One of the staked animals whinnied and tugged
-fiercely on his rope.
-
-At once the buckskin stallion blared a challenge, and he was away. The
-shadows swallowed him up. From over the hill came a rolling thunder, the
-noise of scores of flying hoofs, and Sam got the hobble between his
-teeth a second time, gave one ferocious upward rend, and the strands
-parted and dropped from him. He was free, and the wilderness was
-calling, calling.
-
-“Ol’ Hell-on-Wheels has done gone,” observed Dave.
-
-“Done gone?” the wagon boss echoed. “Gone where? He must be round
-somewheres. He cain’t git through the day without bread, Sam cain’t.”
-
-“He done run off with them mustangs!” In Dave’s tone was depressed
-conviction. “You hearn ’em last night the same as me. Nobody seen him
-go, but look here. I jist found his hobble all bit in two.”
-
-“And we’ve got to move camp this morning,” the wagon boss raved.
-
-“P’raps he’ll come back. I shouldn’t think they’d want Sam with ’em,
-Uncle Henery. He’d smash ’em all up, that bunch, he would!”
-
-“He shore would.” Uncle Henry could not suppress a snigger of
-satisfaction.
-
-He dispatched two of the boys to scour the country for the fugitive, and
-Dave hitched a two-mule team, falling a prey to melancholy as he moved
-about them in absolute security. How he missed that ol’ son-of-a-gun
-with his sly nibbles and his kicking and sublime obstinacy. These
-creatures pull? The cook grew hot with disdain and had two men told off
-to help haul the wagon with ropes in bad spots. In the days that
-followed he would often stop in his work and wonder what sense there was
-in going through life, anyway.
-
-Meanwhile, Sam flourished like unto the green bay tree. When the band
-sped away into the hills the night of his temptation and fall, the mule
-summoned up unguessed reserves of speed and trailed behind. The
-tumultuous joy of liberty fired him; his muscles responded to this new
-throbbing life like steel springs, so that Sam not only caught up with
-the mustangs, but ran well within himself in holding with them. The
-renegade Pete galloped in rear and, knowing Sam these many years,
-nickered him breathless welcome.
-
-A recruit to the ranks was not a novelty, and though Sam was a mule,
-they accepted him readily enough, and for several days they roamed the
-cañons of El Toro. Rains had been frequent in this region and they
-obtained their fill of grass. As is the way of horses, the band paid
-scant attention to the mule; he grazed with them, and when any alarm or
-mere exuberance of spirits prompted a run, he could show his heels to
-all but the buckskin leader and a bay mare which seemed to carry wings
-on her feet.
-
-And on the fifth day occasion arose for him to prove his prowess. In the
-band were a dozen mares, seven colts of various ages and fifteen horses,
-all under the leadership of the buckskin. Now, Sam was a mule of
-considerable common-sense; he never disputed the sovereignty of the
-stallion, but at the same time he was fully sensible of his own strength
-and fighting ability, having had occasion to test the same frequently,
-and he had not the remotest intention of allowing any horse on the range
-or other quadruped, to take undue liberties.
-
-As they came up from watering at a mountain spring at high noon, the
-mustangs were compelled to thread a narrow defile, and much crowding
-resulted. A colt ricochetted from the mule and lost his feet, whereupon
-the mother made at Sam with her teeth. This attack he ignored
-dexterously by bursting through the press and imposing the bodies of
-several horses between him and the indignant mare; but when a youthful
-black took it into his head that Sam was a recreant and could be bullied
-with impunity, various things happened. By now, they were out in the
-open. Trumpeting defiance, the black ran at him.
-
-The combat did not last three minutes. It is probable that the mule
-would have killed his assailant when he lay prone after the third
-onslaught, had not the leader trotted up in royal wrath to quell the
-disorder in his following. Should he go for him too, and reduce him to
-pulp? Sam’s eyes were glittering evilly, and the mulish, enduring rage
-was alive, but his habitual discretion cooled the impulse and he gave
-ground, his ears laid back, his retreat reluctant. The stallion wisely
-let him go.
-
-Soon he attained to a species of leadership, a vice-royalty under the
-reigning buckskin. For one thing, his caution was tempered by almost
-human powers of discrimination; for another, he was never subject to the
-nervous tremors to which even the stallion fell victim and which were
-the inspiration of many stampedes. Sam could sense peril as far as any
-and was dubious, in a calm way, of everything he saw until he had
-investigated; but sudden noises, or a strange scent brought abruptly to
-his nostrils, did not send him flying over the country, shrilling
-warnings. He made reasonably sure of the possibility of danger before
-giving the alarm. Of his old masters, he was peculiarly wary, and twice
-at night, when they passed within a mile of the round-up camp, the
-mule’s nose acquainted him of its proximity, and he led them far to the
-west.
-
-When the outfit had almost completed the round-up, Sam wandered off from
-the band on a morning’s jaunt and came unexpectedly upon the remuda in a
-draw. The wrangler espied that unmistakable gait from afar and spurred
-desperately to catch him, but the mule was fleet as a greyhound and
-could not be headed. Two of the horses followed the fallen one. They
-knew Sam and respected him, and what was good enough for him would suit
-them admirably. Maclovio did not see their departure; madly scurrying
-from point to point to herd the restless horses, he failed to perceive
-the flight toward the gap, and it was only when the roping began after
-dinner that the loss was discovered. The Mexican prayed inwardly that
-Sam would break a leg and die by inches; if he would only break his
-neck, he would buy a dozen candles for the altar at Tucalari.
-
-Old Pete McVey, the manager, sat on the stoop of the bunkhouse at
-headquarters and made a solemn vow to the skies.
-
-“I’ll hunt down every last one of that bunch and hang Sam’s hide to the
-saddle-shed. We’ve had two breakdowns with the wagon since he left--that
-ol’ mule we got from Doghole ain’t no good, Mit--and now two horses have
-run off.”
-
-“I done told Uncle Henery and Dave that I felt shore it was Sam or some
-of them mustangs that stompeded those steers last week.”
-
-“When I get him, the ol’ fool!” burst out the manager.
-
-He organized a hunt, and with three men and four staghounds set out
-cheerily to wipe the wild horses from the face of the earth. The band
-winded them two miles away and carried the hunt to another range, but at
-last they crept within striking distance, and the chase was on.
-
-Sam knew the dogs and had seen them run in sport about headquarters.
-Therefore, he let himself out and led the band beside the buckskin
-stallion, and for mile after mile they raced. A laggard was pulled down,
-the ancient sinner Pete--a hound leaped for his nose and Pete turned a
-somersault. McVey himself shot the injured animal, and they camped in
-the neighborhood and took up the pursuit next morning.
-
-It was a famous hunt. The dogs brought down four animals, and the Lazy L
-men, tiring in the chase, fired after the fugitives, killing three; but
-Sam remained ever in the van, unhurt. McVey led his men back, satisfied
-that the mustangs would seek new haunts, swearing vengefully at Sam and
-rejoicing in his heart that the giant mule had won to safety.
-
-The band wintered in the mountains, and more than once during those
-terrible months the emaciated Hell-on-Wheels had to paw down through
-three inches of snow to get at the grass, and he obtained little more
-than enough to sustain life. Several of the colts succumbed to a
-three-days’ storm, and when spring was ushered in, with a soft wind that
-whispered tender promises to a stricken land, at least a dozen of the
-horses and mares were sickly. As for Sam, he was only hungry. A mule
-seems immune from disease, and hunger and thirst cannot wreak the havoc
-on his iron constitution that they create among the more sensitive
-horses. The mustangs ranged widely in a quest for good pasture and at
-last worked down to the Lazy L.
-
-Dave had put in the cold months in dispirited fashion, there being
-little to do. He moped around headquarters, and whenever the wagon boss
-ventured to consult him on preparations for the spring round-up, the
-cook maintained a glum silence. It would be a bad year, he was sure of
-that; they needn’t expect much of the calf crop. Far be it from him to
-discourage any man, least of all McVey and Uncle Henery, but he felt in
-his bones that ill luck would attend them. What could be expected of a
-wagon team that would let him mire down in Coyote Creek? The round-up
-would be a farce.
-
-“Them mustangs is back,” Reb announced, riding in from a winter camp. “I
-seen ’em topping a mesa over near Lone Pine Spring.”
-
-“I’ll give twenty dollars a head for ’em,” declared the manager, slowly
-removing the pipe from his lips.
-
-Nearly a score of punchers equipped themselves to earn the reward. Some
-failed even to get trace of the band; others trailed them for days, but
-never came in sight; Dick, Bob Saunders and Maclovio got within half a
-mile and with relays of horses applied themselves to capture in a
-scientific way. They would run those mustangs off their legs. In four
-days they were back, with their mounts used up and McVey to welcome
-them.
-
-“That ol’ mule kin smell us a mile,” Dick reported. “He always gives the
-alarm first. And run? Jim-in-ee, the way that rascal kin run!”
-
-Dave listened and gloomed and finally took a great resolution. He might
-just as well be honest with himself--the round-up would never be the
-same without Sam. The cook had been a cowhand in his time and he hadn’t
-trailed cattle up through the Panhandle for nothing. Therefore he would
-not match his speed against the wild horses.
-
-“Say, Mister McVey, I want to git a month off.”
-
-“Where’re you going now? This isn’t another trip to Doghole?”
-
-“I hoped you’d done forgot that,” Dave answered severely. “No, sir, I
-want to go and git Hell-on-Wheels.”
-
-“How could you catch him? I’ve tried; all the boys have tried. And you
-haven’t ridden in ten years.”
-
-“You let me try and you’ll see.” Dave tried to draw in his waist and
-appear athletic as the manager ran his eye over his two hundred and
-fourteen pounds.
-
-“You couldn’t get that mule in a thousand years. Unless”--as an
-afterthought--“you spread breadpans all over the range and set traps.”
-
-“There’s where you’re wrong, Mister McVey, sir. I ain’t rode much since
-I took to cookin’, but I’m pretty active. You gimme that month and
-you’ll see.”
-
-“Go ahead. I’d just as soon pay the reward to you as to anybody
-else--sooner.”
-
-Sam was the first of the band to sight the enemy trudging through the
-sand of the plain toward them. Far behind a burro followed, led by
-another man on foot. This truly was interesting. The mule advanced for a
-closer inspection and the others awaited his verdict, having implicit
-confidence in him as a sentinel. Thus it happened that Dave gained to
-within three hundred yards before Sam flagged his tail and departed. The
-horses massed swiftly into a compact body and followed, but they did not
-run as they would have run from mounted men. Instinctively they knew
-that this thing on two legs could not catch them, so it was at a
-swinging trot that they breasted a hill.
-
-On its crest the mustangs slowed down; they dropped to a walk and turned
-to look back at what pursued. There plodded old Dave, apparently paying
-them no special attention, but nevertheless coming in their direction.
-Once more Sam waited until the cook came within shouting distance, then,
-the buckskin raising the alarm, they cantered off.
-
-So it went all the afternoon. Dave made no attempt to get close up with
-them; he did not conceal his approach; he did not stalk them; and he was
-especially cautious not to alarm to an extent that would send them
-fleeing for miles. Instead, he was satisfied merely to keep them in
-sight. Sometimes he paused to wipe the sweat from his face and neck, but
-he betrayed no impatience. Far behind a burro followed, led by another
-man on foot, and when the cook changed his course so did the burro,
-still maintaining its distance.
-
-Sam was sorely puzzled. That stout figure possessed a peculiar
-attraction for him. When he had put a considerable tract between himself
-and it, he could not forbear to stop and watch what it would do. Still
-it came on--yet it was not threatening. The mule’s sense of danger was
-lulled. And he was not the only perplexed member of the band: curiosity
-had the stallion in its grip, too. There was not a horse among the free
-rovers but would slacken gait to ascertain where the foolish pursuer
-walked now.
-
-By the time the sun died behind a fringe of hills, Sam and the others
-were horribly thirsty. They swung around in a wide semicircle and struck
-for a lake six miles distant. Dave followed. Hardly had they drunk half
-their fill, standing waist-deep in the cooling water, when the expectant
-mule warned them of the approach of that shadowing figure. They waded
-out and made off reluctantly.
-
-The cook arrived two minutes later and stretched out on his back on the
-edge of the lake and thought with sweet sorrow of the days when he
-weighed one hundred and sixty. Presently the man with the burro joined
-him, and they took down their bedding, staked out the tireless
-pack-animal, built a fire of dried broomweed, and ate.
-
-“They won’t go far from here to-night. It jist happens there ain’t any
-water nearer than twenty miles. No-oo, I reckon they’ll hang round
-somewheres near,” Dave observed, rolling a cigarette.
-
-He divined correctly. Sam and his companions discovered that they were
-hungry, very hungry. While they did not realize it, they had eaten
-little that afternoon, for no sooner would they shake off the pursuer
-and fall to nibbling nervously at the dried grass than he would
-reappear, persistent as their own shadows, and they would continue their
-flight. Now he followed no more, and they must eat. Eat they did to some
-extent, but a burning curiosity and a vague uneasiness had seized upon
-them. They felt irresistibly attracted by the campfire that sparkled in
-the darkness down by the water they craved; time after time they would
-near it fearfully. Without turning his head Dave knew that dozens of
-wondering eyes surveyed him from the outer rim of dark fifty yards away.
-
-Before dawn the cook and his assistant had made fast the burro’s burden
-with the “diamond hitch,” and hard upon the coming of light Dave started
-out alone. In an hour he was in sight of the mustangs. Sam shook his
-head in irritation and the band moved off slowly. Dave followed. Far
-behind came a burro, led by a man on foot.
-
-He camped at noon in a stretch of alkali, and because there was no water
-near they partook sparingly of some the cook carried in tins slung over
-the burro’s load. As for the beast, he must wait till nightfall, which
-did not worry the burro in the least. Well Dave knew that the mustangs
-must make for water.
-
-A dozen times in a day the cook would be out of view of the fugitives
-and a dozen times he would catch up with them, disturbing their
-intermittent grazing. It is doubtful if he averaged more than twenty
-miles in twenty-four hours; it is certain that the wild horses covered
-nearly three times that distance in their outbursts of panic and their
-doublings back on the pursuer. The chase led in a triangle that took in
-all the water-holes within a radius of ninety miles, and almost always
-Dave contrived to arrive before the band had got quite their fill.
-
-Sam had lost at least a hundred pounds by the end of a week and was
-become gaunt and savage. Several of the colts, only a few months old,
-gave up the flight and their mothers forsook the band in safety, the
-pursuers ignoring them. The others kept on. Sam’s contempt for the slow
-crawling thing behind them was changing to a haunting dread, and he
-became subject to petty fits of irritation. Why couldn’t the enemy come
-on boldly? Why couldn’t he match his speed with theirs in one grand
-rush? But no, there he was, patiently legging it through the sand,
-through grass, over foothills, up mountain trails, through gorges, down
-into valleys. A horrible fascination took possession of the mule. Had
-Dave turned about to retrace his steps, it is probable that Sam would
-have followed out of curiosity to see where he was going; but Dave still
-came on.
-
-About this time, too, they got a taste of real summer. From an empty sky
-the sun smote the land, browning the hills, crisping the grass in the
-valleys until it crackled into dust. First one mountain stream ceased to
-run, then another; a creek that used to sweep down in a torrent after
-the spring rains now dribbled among scorching boulders. Thus came about
-the beginning of the end.
-
-“They cain’t stand more’n another week of this, Charlie,” Dave remarked,
-as they camped beside a hatful of water in the foothills.
-
-“I reckon not. Did you notice some of them mares? They’s all in. You got
-within fifty yards of ’em once to-day, Dave. The burro here has kep’ up
-well. Ain’t you, you greedy devil? She’s looking fine. I’m giving her
-corn.”
-
-Never did the mustangs get enough to eat. Another sort of madness than
-the madness for liberty was laying hold of Sam. His days consisted of
-timid attempts at grazing, from which he would start at the lightest
-sound; of enforced pilgrimages from one pasture to another; and it must
-have been four hundred hours since he had had his fill of water. More
-than once, in a frenzy of revolt, he put five miles between him and his
-clinging disturber; but after two hours of uneasy nibbling he would be
-interrupted once again--and again must move on. What food he got failed
-to nourish as it should, and the rest he snatched was not rest. In the
-night, when he might have lost his foe, the mule knew well that he was
-near, for there in the blackness his fire sent up its sparks and it drew
-him and his companions like a magnet. No matter where they roamed, the
-cook managed to spend the dark hours near water, and the band could not
-tear themselves from the vicinity.
-
-There came a day when Sam’s ribs showed pitifully through his rough coat
-and he shuffled along in desperate dejection, his ears flopping. A heavy
-fatigue numbed his limbs, made cruel weights of them, and he was
-thirsty, deliriously thirsty; but if his plight was bad, that of the
-mustangs was worse. They stumbled coughing through the dust, too tired
-to lift their feet. Occasionally one broke into a half-hearted trot
-which survived only a few steps. The race was run.
-
-Within six hours the band began to break up. First the mares and colts
-dropped out, careless of what might befall. The mothers went weakly to
-feeding on the burnt grass, their offspring hovering near in the last
-stages of exhaustion; but to these Dave paid no attention. He was after
-Hell-on-Wheels, and he did not intend to inject new life into the jaded
-survivors by the slaughter of their beaten companions. By his orders
-Charlie, too, ignored them, though his fingers itched as his mind dwelt
-on the reward.
-
-Four of the horses lagged, staggered forward a few paces and fell
-behind, spent, swaying dizzily as they moved aside to let Dave pass.
-They were oblivious to everything now, insensible to peril, scarcely
-able to discern objects through their glazed eyes; but Sam and the
-stallion and some few kept on. Dave followed.
-
-Hot rebellion surged up in the mule more than once, sapping his last
-ounce of spirit. Up would go his head in defiance and he would increase
-his lead; but the strength was ebbing from the wonderful muscles of him;
-he was sick at heart and wanted to lie down. Ahead, perhaps an hour’s
-walk, he knew there was water. He must reach that. Would this thing that
-hung to their rear never give them respite?
-
-Dave trudged now only twenty yards back. He was footsore, a fearful
-weariness was upon him and the heat was awful. Yet no thought of giving
-up occurred to his mind; his patience was unfailing. Not once did he do
-a hurried thing to alarm the quarry.
-
-[Illustration: “_What you mean by running off this a-way?_”]
-
-It was the twenty-fourth day. All around them stretched a desert of
-alkali broken by patches of tree-cactus and clumps of bear-grass, and
-through the white, chalky dust Sam toiled dispiritedly a dozen yards in
-front of the stallion. Behind the faltering buckskin limped five
-skeletons of horses, and ten yards behind the hindermost walked Dave.
-There was no need that Charlie remain far in rear. The mustangs did not
-notice him, and he followed close with the burro.
-
-The rovers had drunk deep that morning at a spring on the edge of the
-desert--this being as Dave would have it--and now all vigor of body and
-spirit had departed. Sam’s head swung low to the ground, his knees were
-shaking and he saw nothing of what he passed. To his bloodshot eyes
-these scorched wastes were a wavering mist, and he knew only that he
-must go on.
-
-Suddenly, as though by telepathic agreement, the weird procession
-halted. Sam turned. He faced the cook as he came up without hesitation,
-rope in hand. Dave slipped the noose about his neck and rubbed the dusty
-muzzle sunk against his hip.
-
-“You ol’ fool, you!” he mouthed at him. “What you mean by running off
-this a-way? Didn’t you know that team weren’t no good without you? What
-did you reckon I was going to do, you pore ol’ son-of-a-gun?”
-
-He ran his eye over the emaciated body; then his glance fell to his own
-shrunken outline.
-
-“I reckon we’re both some thinner, Sam. And my feet’s awful sore. What
-you need is corn. Here, Charlie, gimme that ‘morale’!”
-
-Staked out with the nosebag over his head, the mule munched dully on the
-life-giving grain, while Dave prepared dinner and Charlie moved from
-point to point on the plain with a rifle, earning half a month’s pay
-every time he got near a horse. Charlie began to figure he would be a
-rich cowman some day.
-
-Two hours later the men were smoking in the peace and content of hard
-work well done, when Sam walked stiffly to the end of his rope. By
-straining on it he could just reach the edge of the campfire. Dave rose
-up on his elbow.
-
-“Hi, there! Git your nose out’n that pan, you rascal! I swan, he’s
-hunting for bread.”
-
-
-
-
- II
- THE MARAUDER
-
-
-Six frowsy buzzards sat on a tree and made mock of his hunger. With his
-bushy tail drooping dismally between his legs, he zigzagged his way up
-the wide, dry bed of Red River, flitting from cover to cover like an
-uneasy ghost. Up one steep bank he sidled, to squat on his haunches,
-whence he surveyed the camp hungrily.
-
-“There’s a big ol’ ki-yote,” said the hoodlum driver. “Git your gun,
-Dave.”
-
-The cook abandoned the washpan with alacrity and ransacked the
-chuck-wagon for his weapon. When he rejoined Mac the coyote was still in
-view, but he seemed farther away.
-
-“He done moved. I cain’t hit him from here,” said the cook.
-
-“I been watching him and he ain’t budged. Yes, he has, too. I’ll swan, I
-never seen him do it.”
-
-The prairie wolf now sat a good three hundred yards away, his back to
-the camp, as though indifferent and contemptuous of it. Dave knelt on
-one heel, took slow, careful aim, and fired. A spurt of sand five yards
-short of the coyote was the result. The animal half turned his head, the
-sensitive upper lip quivered and curled over the wicked fangs, for all
-the world like a sneer, and then he resumed his placid scrutiny of
-nothing. Mac forcibly removed the rifle from Dave’s grasp, deaf to his
-picturesque explanation of the miss, adjusted the sight and lay down.
-
-“You had it sighted for a hunderd yards,” he rebuked. “I put her up a
-few notches.”
-
-“Whee-ee-ee,” whined a snub-nosed leaden pellet. A spurt of sand five
-yards beyond the coyote was the result. It aroused the animal to instant
-activity. If he was not beyond range, then the wagon had a better gun
-than he had ever met with, so he glided away like a shadow.
-
-“There goes two dollars bounty,” sighed the cook regretfully. “That’s
-just what I done lost to Jack, shootin’ craps last night.”
-
-“Where’s that nester’s ol’ dog that was smelling round the pots this
-morning?” Mac demanded. “There he goes now. Hi-yi, ol’ feller! Go git
-him, boy! Go to him!”
-
-A yellow mongrel, half shepherd and a mixture of other breeds, abandoned
-his slinking tour of the camp and became at once a respectable, alert
-dog, with a job. He sighted the fleeing coyote, and, giving tongue,
-followed after.
-
-“He won’t never catch him. Those lil’ ol’ ki-yotes kin outrun a streak
-of lightning, and stop to sleep a-doing it,” said Mac.
-
-It was evident that the pursuit did not worry the fugitive greatly. He
-loped along easily, with the dog gaining at every frantic leap until a
-scant yard separated them, when, still maintaining his careless gait,
-the coyote veered to the south; and yet the distance between them did
-not diminish. The dog was blowing and puffing throaty threats, while the
-wolf watched him out of the corner of one eye. With a mad burst of speed
-the cur gained a yard, whereupon something happened. Without appearing
-to strain himself at all, the coyote simply disappeared from view over
-the next rise. The dog had seen a pepper-and-salt, gray streak flash
-over the crest, but that was all. He stopped in a dazed sort of way to
-figure the matter out.
-
-While he was figuring, a foxlike head poked itself over a clump of
-bear-grass and the coyote yawned in his face. Once more the chase was
-on, with redoubled fury.
-
-This was an old game to Scartoe. He had raced all sorts of dogs, from
-collie to fox terrier, and only once, when a greyhound ran him, had he
-stood in danger. Greatly to his chagrin and alarm on that occasion, he
-had been forced to switch the lithe pursuer unexpectedly into a
-barb-wire division-fence, to save his hide. As he ran now he was
-studying this loud-voiced antagonist of the yellow hair. Whatever he
-saw, the result was wholly surprising. He increased his lead by ten
-yards, then whirled about and sat down, at which the dog plowed up the
-ground for five feet in a panic-stricken effort to put on the brakes,
-and promptly changed his course. Still growling, he trotted away toward
-a cactus far to the left, as though suddenly made aware of something
-extremely interesting to be found there.
-
-The coyote’s lip flickered, and he walked to the sandy sides of a
-ravine. With a final look back from its top, he descended leisurely;
-then, once in the creek bed, glided at top speed in an opposite
-direction. He was bound homeward.
-
-All of which goes to show the delicacy of coyote judgment and the depths
-of his knowledge of human and canine nature. For there are dogs which
-will close on a coyote and kill him at the first opportunity and with no
-hesitation. Pluck does not run exclusively in breeds, and individual
-dogs of all kinds have been known to go for the prairie thief at sight,
-and even for the redoubtable lobo; but others there are which will shirk
-a tussle with this scorned of the wolf tribe, this scavenger and outcast
-of the wild. And a coyote, being lowest in the ranks of those obsessed
-of fear, is the readiest to detect cowardice in others; moreover, he has
-the cunning to profit by it.
-
-Enjoyable as this little breather had been, it had not provided the meal
-for which he was searching. Rather it had whetted the gnawing demand for
-it and the prospect of obtaining anything seemed more remote than ever,
-because he had builded some hopes on scraps from the camp. Scartoe eased
-to a walk--not the brisk, firm patter of the dog, but a sneaking,
-apologetic, tortuous gait, that was yet swift and wonderfully noiseless.
-
-Prairie dogs there were none, though he scour the length and breadth of
-six hundred square miles. Poison had done its work thoroughly and only
-the empty holes remained, half grown over with grass and weeds, a
-constant menace to horsemen. Of ground squirrel there were a few, and at
-certain seasons the sage grouse furnished him succulent meals; but these
-were trifles, after all, and it took infinite patience and stealth to
-secure them.
-
-Scartoe crept slantwise up a ridge and took a look around. The sun beat
-down on a land it had desolated. Where creeks had been were now gorges
-of baked clay; a long stretch of sage-grass was white with dust and
-crackling; large fissures dumbly voiced the parched ground’s protests;
-the bear-grass and cactus showed scrawny and dried; and above this
-scorched land rose a canopy of jumbled white clouds, magnificent,
-matchless. A score or two of lean cattle were browsing on the slopes,
-nibbling the long, yellow bean pods from mesquite trees, but of other
-signs of life there were none, save the scurrying green and blue and
-golden-brown lizards, which darted from stone to stone at amazing speed.
-
-And this had been the style of his hunting for weeks, so that he was
-gaunt and desperate. Nothing in all the world in the shape of meat,
-except creatures so large and strong he dare not attack. Nothing--his
-restless eyes became riveted on a bush not fifty yards to his right.
-Surely something had stirred there. His nose was thrust forward to give
-his extraordinarily strong sense of smell a chance, and it told him what
-his eyes were unable wholly to define. There was a calf behind that
-bush.
-
-His famished stomach drove him forward, while his natural cowardice
-whispered caution. It was plain to him that the calf was very young.
-Otherwise he would have wanted the assistance of a brother marauder.
-Even now, however, those cattle grazing on the slopes haunted him, but a
-fleeting glance over the immediate vicinity assured him the prey was
-unguarded. So he stole forward. His advance was a miracle of furtive
-effort, and such was the beast’s inherited cunning that, quite
-unconsciously, he took advantage of spots where his color blended so
-harmoniously with the rough ground that wolf and rock and shrub were
-indistinguishable.
-
-The gods of little calves must have been wide-awake that day; else what
-could have prompted the youngster to stir and lift his head? He had
-heard no sound; no scent had reached his nostrils. The coyote was too
-old a hand at stalking for that. A pair of round, fear-distended eyes
-were turned toward the terrible thing that shot through space straight
-for his neck, and a plaintive bawl was cut short in the middle. That was
-because the calf got into action--action quicker than any in his life of
-three weeks. He lurched upward and departed, minus the left ear. The
-beast snarled and turned to pursue, but a noise diverted him. Like a man
-waking from a dream, the coyote caught, too late, the rush of hoofs. He
-shrank aside, but not far enough. The mother’s horns caught him above
-the shoulder and ripped him to the flank, tossing him five feet into the
-air. When he came down he tarried not, but, bloody, torn and mad with
-fear, sought the safety of his cañon retreat.
-
-His wife and five babies were awaiting him. He had been out all night on
-his prowl for food, and it was now three hours after sunup, the hour
-when, ordinarily, he would be stretched out on a sunny knoll, taking a
-nap in the content of a full stomach. A score of yards from the den his
-nose told him that the family had fed, so he came trotting down the
-rocky creek-bed, stiffly expectant. The tiny, furry, broad-headed pups
-were snarling and tugging at the remnants of a meal and, hungry though
-he was, he paused to watch them with a certain fatherly pride. Then, at
-a growl from his mate, he slunk forth again on his quest. His wound
-smarted, but did not cripple him, and hunger was a spur.
-
-[Illustration: “_The wolf drove away a couple of buzzards and fell upon
-this savagely_”]
-
-He found what his wife had said he would find, the remains of the offal
-of a heifer which the outfit had killed the previous day for food.
-Luckier in her search, the mother coyote had come upon the abandoned
-camp late the previous night, though it was ten miles from home and she
-disliked such distant hunting; and, having fed, she had carried a huge
-strip of the entrails to her babies. The wolf drove away a couple of
-buzzards and fell upon this savagely; and, having gorged, sat down to
-lick his cut. In a few minutes he moved painfully on the back trail, for
-his hurts were stiffening.
-
-The family home was a simple affair, such as the original families of
-human kind might have begun life with. Anything provided with an
-olfactor could ascertain its propinquity at a distance of forty yards,
-for it gave off the stinging, musty odor of the wolf tribe. There were
-also numerous faint trails hard by, some of them blind trails, contrived
-cunningly to draw the stupid hunter astray. The genuine paths led into a
-broader, clearly-defined one which ended in a hole about two feet square
-in the wall of an arroyo, and this entrance was concealed from the
-casual observer by a scrub-cedar that clung to a precarious foothold and
-subsisted on nothing. No water had come down this channel in generations
-and they felt safe on that score.
-
-The hallway of the home was little more than a yard long. It led into a
-den whereto no light penetrated--a hollowed space perhaps two and a half
-feet high, and large enough for the head of the house to turn around in.
-There were also some ramifications to it, four smaller cells dug out in
-the same fashion, and out of one of these another passage led upward. It
-came out on top of the embankment, twenty feet away; for Scartoe was a
-cautious rascal and had no intention of letting his domicile become a
-trap. He desired it to be a haven and, therefore, he had selected a
-residence with a back door, though most of his tribe contented
-themselves with an entrance.
-
-This caution was habitual with him and was the child of experience.
-Experience had taught him some bitter lessons and had given him his
-name. For, in the spring of the year when he reached his full height and
-was filled with conceit of his strength, a famine threatened. The wolf
-ranged far and got nothing. Hitherto suspicious of the haunts of men, he
-overcame his fears at last and raided the ranch headquarters and came
-away with a lusty young rooster. Next night he attempted to repeat this
-feat, and while nosing the skeleton of a cow lying close to the home
-pasture fence, something snapped over his foot. A numbing pain shot
-through him. When he bounded high and backward to clear, he was jerked
-to the ground.
-
-Clasped like a vise about his toes was a steel trap, a mercilessly
-powerful contraption of chains, weighted with two hundred pounds. It had
-him, but fortunately his leg was not caught. In his frenzy of terror,
-freedom was worth any sacrifice or pain. He sank his teeth into his own
-flesh and gnawed his toes off, and holding the bleeding stump up in
-front of him, fled on three legs. Not a sound did he make during his
-agony. It was not pluck, but a stoicism begot of fear. Had he whined, a
-charge of buckshot would have ended his days; for the cook dozed
-fitfully behind a woodpile fifty yards away.
-
-When the foot grew well he was a trifle short in the left foreleg; but
-it made scarcely any difference in his gait. The only difference was in
-the trail he made, and from that he was known as Scartoe.
-
-The hurt the cow gave him healed with astonishing rapidity, for sunlight
-and dry air are Nature’s magicians. While taking a siesta in front of
-his den next afternoon and tenderly licking the ragged wound, he was
-witness of a strange encounter. His pups were frisking about, tumbling
-and growling and snapping in youthful enjoyment of life, while the
-mother lay beside him, encouraging these evidences of prospective adult
-ferocity.
-
-At the foot of the knoll whereon they reposed, something rose, wavering,
-with a fear-thrilling rattle, and the pups scattered. At the same moment
-a sharp hiss answered this first challenge. With eyes glowing and ears
-cocked, husband and wife waited for the battle between these enemies.
-
-A dark green reptile with cream-colored bands, about forty inches in
-length, was circling a rattler. The latter lay coiled, ready to strike,
-his folds curling and uncurling in long ripples as his head turned to
-follow the movements of his enemy. Fully six feet in length he was and
-of a prodigious thickness; but fear had already entered the heart of
-him. The king-snake sped around him with the speed of light; once,
-twice, thrice the rattler launched a blow, but there was no foe there.
-Then the malignant killer was on him.
-
-A king-snake is immune from the rattler’s poison and wages constant
-warfare on all reptiles. Such is the steel-wire strength of his coils
-that the size of an adversary never daunts him for an instant. He will
-tackle a snake twice his size and weight, and he will kill him, too. It
-was all over in a few minutes. Round and round his victim he folded
-himself; each second the pressure increased. There was some desperate
-flaying of the ground as the combatants struggled, for the enemy of all
-brute creation was fighting for his life. When he lay dead, the
-king-snake let go and tried to swallow him. He did, in fact, get him
-half down, but the practical difficulty in the way of surrounding an
-object larger than one’s self triumphed over his appetite. So he gave up
-the attempt and the reptile.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Bow-wow! Ki-yi, yeow-eow-eow-eow-eow.”
-
-Scartoe stood on a butte, with his nose pointing to the moon, his tail
-between his legs, and weirdly gave vent to his feelings in song. It
-began with two short barks and trailed into a succession of piercing,
-reverberating yelps, that melted into one another and rolled and echoed,
-as by the ventriloquist’s art, until the night grew hideous with the
-clamor. One would have sworn that a hundred coyotes held the hill, and
-were indulging in some funereal close-harmony.
-
-This was his evensong. It came welling from his throat in a flood, in
-spite of him, and the coyote could no more control the impulse, the
-inheritance of ages, than a man can choke back the hiccoughs. His
-stomach would retch and his neck muscles work in the throes of it until
-the song was released. Once again, in the course of twenty-four hours,
-did the impulse seize him. Just before the sun crept over the edge of
-the world his nose would be tilted toward the gray vault of heaven.
-
-“Bow-wow! Ki-yi, yeow-eow-eow-eow-eow!”
-
-He desisted at last and, considerably uplifted, departed on his hunt for
-food. A score of his fellows he met in his prowling, some hunting in
-couples; but Scartoe was a family man and a lone marauder, and would
-have none of them. In the half million acres composing the ranch were
-fully four hundred of his brethren. This in spite of a once vigorous
-warfare, in which poison and trap and gun and dog had been the weapons.
-In the last three years the campaign against the coyotes had waned,
-though each head would bring the taker a bounty at the county-seat and
-another at headquarters.
-
-It is not to be wondered at that the thieves became arrogant and
-venturesome. They reveled in their depredations and pitted their keen
-wits against man’s intelligence with increasing boldness. What if twenty
-thousand of their brethren had been killed in the previous twelvemonth,
-in the national forest preserves alone? Many times twenty thousand
-survived in the cattle country; and official estimate gives it that each
-coyote does damage to stock to the amount of one hundred dollars
-annually. Scartoe must have passed, on the silent trails in his night
-hunt, the destroyers of ten thousand dollars’ worth of stock in a year.
-
-Once he paused in a patch of broomweed to send his doleful cry to the
-stars. It gurgled from his throat like water from a bottle. He gave
-tongue no more that night. From the mouth of a cañon, far to his right,
-sounded a long-drawn howl, plaintive, threatening. Hardly had it ceased
-than a piercing scream broke from a hackberry tree within a hundred
-yards of where Scartoe crouched. Truly the lords of the wilds were
-abroad to-night; but it was not the panther’s cry which drove Scartoe
-from the trail. What he was giving right-of-way to was the lobo.
-
-The coyote drew off a short distance and sank humbly to earth as a
-loafer wolf came running out of the shadows. He was a huge fellow,
-almost red along the back, gray as to his underbody, and he loped
-purposefully, bent on slaughter. Scartoe sank lower and groveled. In
-imagination he was fawning upon this mighty creature that inspired him
-with dread and respect; for, though of the same race, they were far
-apart as the poles. He knew the magnificent courage of the loafer and,
-when the King hunted, to him belonged the trail.
-
-He watched him go by, and once more wended his devious way across
-country. A nice little scheme had hatched in his brain as he lay there,
-born of a long-time feud. Forty turkeys, eighty chickens and nineteen
-cocks were now to his credit; to the credit of the ranch-house cook
-stood the toes of his left foreleg. One turkey-gobbler remained--that he
-knew with accuracy, and Scartoe speculated pleasurably thereon.
-
-Had he been a human being, he would have laughed as he slid under the
-outer barb-wire fence at headquarters. Ten paces away he had scented the
-handiwork of man. Sprinkle and smooth the sand as he might, set bait and
-lay trap ever so cunningly, the cook could not foil that marvelous
-instinct. There were but two holes by which Scartoe could enter the pen;
-before he started he was well aware that a trap lay in each. Approaching
-one, three feet from it, he scratched loose stones and earth behind him
-in a shower on a spot which looked too smooth and inviting to his eye
-and where his nose told him a man had fussed with his hands.
-
-At last he was rewarded. A stick he rolled over touched the spring, and
-the steel jaws leaped together with a clash. He proceeded to dig all
-around the trap until it was wholly exposed, after which he gave a
-disdainful sniff and jumped over it. Thirty seconds later he emerged
-from the pen bearing a fine, fat gobbler, and away he went, careless of
-the trail of feathers his dragging prey made.
-
-“You-all kin see for yourself what he done,” cried the cook, gloriously
-profane, next morning. “He knowed that was there all the time and simply
-sprung it. Got that lil’ ol’ gobbler, too; last one I had.”
-
-“Ki-yotes is shore smart,” the straw boss agreed. “Smart as humans, I
-reckon.”
-
-“Smart as humans?” the cook retorted contemptuously. “Why, ol’ Dick is a
-human.”
-
-“That’s so,” said the straw boss thoughtfully. “Well, they’s smarter,
-then; smart as a good hoss.”
-
-“That ol’ ki-yote and me’s been fighting for three years. I near had him
-once; but he done chawed his foot off--they’s that treacherous. Only
-last week I done set a rooster in that mesquite tree there, and put
-traps all around. He had to step in one to git that bird. Know what he
-done?” The cook’s voice rose to a howl. “I’ll eat my shirt if he didn’t
-go off and git a friend, who sprung the trap and got caught. Yes, sir.
-Then ol’ Scartoe, he done jump in and got the rooster.”
-
-“Ever try poison?”
-
-“Won’t touch it. He kin smell strych-nine farther’n he kin see. Ate some
-once and near died, I reckon, for I seen the place where he was took
-sick. Every trap I set, he just scratches stones or sticks on to it
-until he springs the thing.”
-
-The straw boss, riding to a division camp the next day, came upon
-Scartoe trying to imitate a rock as he slept on the brow of a hill. The
-rider had no gun, but got down his rope and rode toward the sleeper
-carelessly, so as not to alarm him. The coyote let him approach within
-thirty yards, then awoke to yawn; but he was wrong in his estimate of
-the straw boss, because that worthy gentleman, hot with the memory of
-the recent indignity, let out a whoop and gave chase. Before he could
-warm up into anything like his usual form, a rope sped through the air
-and encircled Scartoe’s neck.
-
-Now, there are three rules to observe in roping coyotes. The first is
-not to rope them, and the other two do not matter. A noose was nothing
-new to Scartoe and he knew the parry. Before it could tighten and jerk
-him into eternity, he took one slashing bite at it and the rope parted,
-cut clean. Next moment the coyote had mingled with the scenery.
-
-He was a serious-minded animal, yet he permitted himself some
-diversions. When his wife found the remains of the beef, Scartoe
-realized that there was a round-up in progress, which meant food in
-plenty, and he took to following the outfit from camp to camp, singing
-to them about nine o’clock every night and again before the dawn. They
-showed their appreciation by taking pot shots at him with a .30-30; but
-he bore a charmed life. He managed to pick up much good meat by this
-association, too, for the outfit killed a heifer every other day and
-left enough to feed half a dozen coyotes. Sometimes he had to scare away
-foolish cows or steers, which, attracted by the smell of blood, would be
-holding moaning wakes over the remains; and always he had to be on the
-watch for the buzzards or they would forestall him.
-
-Lightly footing it about camp one night, he startled a work-horse,
-himself a night prowler, bent on stealing buns from the chuck-wagon
-which he helped to haul during the day. A coyote would never attack a
-horse, placing too much value on his life, but this beast was a young,
-inexperienced creature and did not know that. With a snort of dismay, he
-dashed off. Pleased with himself, Scartoe gave chase in pure sport,
-precisely as a playful dog might have done. Twice around the camp they
-ran, then through it, stampeding eleven staked horses and smashing the
-guy-ropes of the fly, which fell on the cook, who never claimed to be a
-Christian and had no fears of an after-life.
-
-The punchers awoke, cursing volubly, and one of them, sleeping remote
-from the others on the edge of camp, shied a boot at the wolf. He
-stopped in his run, smelled of it, then bore it homeward. It would make
-a fine plaything for the babies. The puncher rode twenty-seven miles to
-headquarters next day, in his socks, to get a new pair of boots.
-
-Four months passed thus pleasurably. Sometimes the family nearly
-starved, at others the puppies sagged in the middle from overeating.
-Always there were bones and odds and ends of hides old Scartoe had
-hidden away to gnaw on in moments of leisure, but they made poor stays
-to hunger.
-
-When winter shut down on the land Scartoe got rid of wife and children.
-He simply wandered off when the puppies grew big enough to care for
-themselves; and he found another home in an isolated ravine. In the cold
-nights that followed he took to consorting with other bachelors, roving
-spirits all. Very often they hunted in bands. They were few in number,
-because it is not coyote nature to run in packs, but this union gave
-them strength and made them infinitely more dangerous. Two score times
-they stalked and killed lonely, unprotected calves.
-
-Later, they were so hard put to it for food that courage was born in
-them. One night four surrounded an eight-months’-old steer one of them
-would never have tackled singly, and slew him. It was Scartoe who
-devised the plan that the three should run him by a bush, behind which
-he crouched. It was Scartoe who leapt swiftly, unerringly, for the nose
-and brought him down. And it was he who got the lion’s share of the
-spoils.
-
-Yet they were cowards for all that. A coyote is always a coward, even
-when driven frantic by hunger.
-
-With the storm kings holding sway, their foraging became less and less
-fruitful. Several of his race departed for new hunting grounds, but
-Scartoe stayed in his own domain and weathered the gales.
-
-Twice had he to eat of his own kind. Toward break of a wintry day he and
-one companion slunk homeward from an unsuccessful scout, their empty
-stomachs crying aloud for flesh. They watched each other in suspicion,
-for in each one the same desire was uppermost. Ahead of them, crossing
-their trail, a wounded coyote dragged himself--spent, done almost to
-death in a grapple with a nester’s dog. They fell upon and slew and ate
-him. Later, a full month, or perhaps two, when the same companion grew
-wasted and weak from hunger, and in all the forsaken country they could
-not kill, when not even a field mouse rewarded long hours of hunting,
-Scartoe ran at him and, with one shrewd stroke upward, slit his throat
-and let out the life blood. He ate his fill and came once more into his
-strength.
-
-Only once during that time of stress did he pit his cunning against
-man’s guile. That was when the snow was off the ground and a party of
-visitors at the ranch-house hunted him with imported dogs. Scartoe made
-the most glorious mess of his trail. He went back on it, crossed,
-recrossed, waded up-stream, returned to the starting point, and employed
-all the tricks his long years had taught him. Then he lay down behind a
-dead prickly pear and watched the hunt; watched the chagrin of the men;
-watched every movement of the dogs, nosing and worrying. Tiring of this
-in half an hour, he went to his den and slept. They never untangled the
-web of his weaving.
-
-When spring came Scartoe was looking shabby. He was morose, too, and had
-a longing for companionship. A week of fine weather improved him so that
-he was almost the Scartoe of old; but the longing for companionship was
-tenfold greater.
-
-On a February morn he lifted up his voice to herald the dawn.
-
-“Bow-wow! Ki-yi, yeow-eow-eow-eow-eow.”
-
-A joyous bark answered. It was not the call of his kind, yet it thrilled
-him, for in it there was a note he knew. He stiffened and trembled with
-expectation. A young collie came bounding toward him. She paused
-doubtfully a dozen yards away and growled. Scartoe threw up his head,
-thrust out his tail from its usual abject droop and went toward her
-blithely. Then his hair bristled, his muscles tightened and he was ready
-for combat.
-
-Behind her came another coyote. He was big. Even the veteran, large as
-he was, appeared small in comparison. Where the newcomer had picked up
-the living that had given him such weight was a puzzle; but certain it
-was he had ten pounds the better of it. Not a thought gave Scartoe to
-that handicap.
-
-The big wolf wasted no time in preliminaries. His strength and skill had
-been tried in mêlées innumerable, and foes had been swept before him
-like chaff. But Scartoe was a general. Like lightning he dodged the
-swift rush; like lightning he ripped even as he swerved, tearing a piece
-from his enemy’s neck. Coyotes will not grapple and cling with locked
-jaws, as do the brave among dogs; they depend on the swift cutting
-powers of their dexterous jaws. Three times they came together; three
-times old Scartoe gashed his antagonist so that the blood spurted. Still
-he could not quite reach the throat for the death stroke.
-
-And then the end came. Too eager in his desire to finish the battle, he
-left himself open for the merest flick of time, as he wheeled for a
-fourth onslaught. With one hurtling, upward dive, the big brute gained
-the jugular, and Scartoe was thrown back, his throat torn, the life
-ebbing from him.
-
-The collie frisked about the victor, playfully showing her teeth, and
-they trotted away together.
-
-An hour after sunup, the ranch-house cook, on a quest for his infant
-son’s collie pet, came upon the torn, lifeless body.
-
-“Jumping Jupiter!” he exclaimed, prayerfully. “It’s ol’ Scartoe.”
-
-
-
-
- III
- CORAZÓN
-
-
- A man is as good as his nerves
- --Cowboy maxim.
-
-With manes streaming in the wind, a band of bronchos fled across the
-grama flats, splashed through the San Pedro, and whirled sharply to the
-right, heading for sanctuary in the Dragoons. In the lead raced a big
-sorrel, his coat shimmering like polished gold where the sun touched it.
-
-“That’s Corazón,” exclaimed Reb. “Head him or we’ll lose the bunch.”
-
-The pursuers spread out and swept round in a wide semicircle. Corazón
-held to his course, a dozen yards in advance of the others, his head
-high. The chase slackened, died away. With a blaring neigh, the sorrel
-eased his furious pace and the entire band came to a trot. Before them
-were the mountains, and Corazón knew their fastnesses as the street
-urchin knows the alleys that give him refuge; in the cañons the bronchos
-would be safe from man. Behind was no sign of the enemy. His nose in the
-wind, he sniffed long, but it bore him no taint. Instead, he nickered
-with delight, for he smelled water. They swung to the south, and in less
-than five minutes their hot muzzles were washed by the bubbling waters
-of Eternity Spring.
-
-Corazón drew in a long breath, expanding his well-ribbed sides, and
-looked up from drinking. There in front of him, fifty paces away, was a
-horseman. He snorted the alarm and they plunged into a tangle of
-sagebrush. Another rider bore down and turned them back. To right and
-left they darted, then wheeled and sought desperately to break through
-the cordon at a weak spot, and failed. Wherever they turned, a cowboy
-appeared as by magic. At last Corazón detected an unguarded area and
-flew through it with the speed of light.
-
-“Now we’ve got ’em,” howled Reb. “Don’t drive too close, but keep ’em
-headed for the corral.”
-
-Within a hundred yards of the gate, the sorrel halted, his ears cocked
-in doubt. The cowboys closed in to force the band through. Three times
-the bronchos broke and scattered, for to their wild instincts the fences
-and that narrow aperture cried treachery and danger. They were gathered,
-with whoops and many imprecations, and once more approached the
-entrance.
-
-“Drive the saddle bunch out,” commanded the range boss.
-
-Forth came the remuda of a hundred horses. The bronchos shrilled
-greeting and mingled with them, and when the cow-ponies trotted meekly
-into the corral, Corazón and his band went too, though they shook and
-were afraid.
-
-For five years Corazón had roamed the range--ever since he had
-discovered that grass was good to eat, and so had left the care of his
-tender-eyed mother. Because he dreaded the master of created things and
-fled him afar, only once during that time had he seen man at close
-quarters. That was when, as a youngster, he was caught and branded on
-the left hip. He had quickly forgotten that; until now it had ceased to
-be even a memory.
-
-But now he and his companion rovers were prisoners, cooped in a corral
-by a contemptible trick. They crowded around and around the stout
-enclosure, sometimes dropping to their knees in efforts to discover an
-exit beneath the boards. And not twenty feet away, the dreaded axis of
-their circlings, sat a man on a horse, and he studied them calmly. Other
-men, astride the fence, were uncoiling ropes, and their manner was
-placid and businesslike. One opined dispassionately that “the sorrel is
-shore some horse.”
-
-“You’re damn whistlin’,” cried the buster over his shoulder, in hearty
-affirmation.
-
-Corazón was the most distracted of all the band. He was in a frenzy of
-nervous fear, his glossy coat wet and foam-flecked. He would not stand
-still for a second, but prowled about the wooden barrier like a jungle
-creature newly prisoned in a cage. Twice he nosed the ground and crooked
-his forelegs in an endeavor to slide through the six inches of clear
-space beneath the gate, and the outfit laughed derisively.
-
-“Here goes,” announced the buster in his expressionless tones. “You-all
-watch out, now. Hell’ll be poppin’.”
-
-At that moment Corazón took it into his head to dash at top speed
-through his friends, huddled in a bunch in a corner. A rope whined and
-coiled, and, when he burst out of the jam, the noose was around his
-neck, tightening so as to strangle him. Madly he ran against it, superb
-in the sureness of his might. Then he squalled with rage and pain and an
-awful terror. His legs flew from under him, and poor Corazón was jerked
-three feet into the air, coming down on his side with smashing force.
-The fall shook a grunt out of him, and he was stunned and breathless,
-but unhurt. He staggered to his feet, his breath straining like a
-bellows, for the noose cut into his neck and he would not yield to its
-pressure.
-
-Facing him was the man on the bay. His mount stood with feet braced,
-sitting back on the rope, and he and his rider were quite collected and
-cool and prepared. The sorrel’s eyes were starting from his head; his
-nostrils flared wide, gaping for the air that was denied him, and the
-breath sucked in his throat. It seemed as if he must drop. Suddenly the
-buster touched his horse lightly with the spur and slackened the rope.
-With a long sob, Corazón drew in a life-giving draught, his gaze fixed
-in frightened appeal on his captor.
-
-“Open the gate,” said Mullins, without raising his voice.
-
-He flicked the rope over Corazón’s hind quarters, and essayed to drive
-him into the next corral, to cut him off from his fellows. The sorrel
-gave a gasp of dismay and lunged forward. Again he was lifted from the
-ground, and came down with a thud that left him shivering.
-
-“His laig’s done bust!” exclaimed the boss.
-
-“No; he’s shook up, that’s all. Wait awhile.”
-
-A moment later Corazón raised his head painfully; then, life and courage
-coming back with a rush, he lurched to his feet. Mullins waited with
-unabated patience. The sorrel was beginning to respect that which
-encircled his neck and made naught of his strength, and when the buster
-flipped the rope again, he ran through the small gate, and brought up
-before he had reached the end of his tether.
-
-Two of the cowboys stepped down languidly from the fence, and took
-position in the center of the corral.
-
-“Hi, Corazón! Go it, boy!” they yelled, and spurred by their cries, the
-horse started off at a trot. Reb tossed his loop,--flung it carelessly,
-with a sinuous movement of the wrist,--and when Corazón had gone a few
-yards, he found his forefeet ensnared. Enraged at being thus cramped, he
-bucked and bawled; but, before Reb could settle on the rope, he came to
-a standstill and sank his teeth into the strands. Once, twice, thrice he
-tugged, but could make no impression. Then he pitched high in air, and--
-
-“NOW!” shrieked Reb.
-
-They heaved with might and main, and Corazón flopped in the dust. Quick
-as a cat, he sprang upright and bolted; but again they downed him, and,
-while Reb held the head by straddling the neck, his confederate twined
-dexterously with a stake-rope. There lay Corazón, helpless and almost
-spent, trussed up like a sheep for market: they had hog-tied him.
-
-It was the buster who put the hackamore on his head. Very deliberately
-he moved. Corazón sensed confidence in the touch of his fingers; they
-spoke a language to him, and he was soothed by the sureness of
-superiority they conveyed. He lay quiet. Then Reb incautiously shifted
-his position, and the horse heaved and raised his head, banging Mullins
-across the ear. The buster’s senses swam, but instead of flying into a
-rage, he became quieter, more deliberate; in his cold eyes was a
-vengeful gleam, and dangerous stealth lurked in his delicate
-manipulation of the strands. An excruciating pain shot through the
-sorrel’s eye: Mullins had gouged him.
-
-“Let him up.” It was the buster again, atop the bay, making the rope
-fast with a double half-hitch over the horn of the saddle.
-
-Corazón arose, dazed and very sick. But his spirit was unbreakable.
-Again and again he strove to tear loose, rearing, falling back, plunging
-to the end of the rope until he was hurled off his legs to the ground.
-When he began to weary, Mullins encouraged him to fight, that he might
-toss him.
-
-“I’ll learn you what this rope means,” he remarked, as the broncho
-scattered the dust for the ninth time, and remained there, completely
-done up.
-
-In deadly fear of his slender tether, yet alert to match his strength
-against it once more, should opportunity offer, Corazón followed the
-buster quietly enough when he rode out into the open. Beside a sturdy
-mesquite bush that grew apart from its brethren, Mullins dismounted and
-tied the sorrel. As a farewell he waved his arms and whooped. Of course
-Corazón gathered himself and leaped--leaped to the utmost that was in
-him, so that the bush vibrated to its farthest root; and of course he
-hit the earth with a jarring thump that temporarily paralyzed him.
-Mullins departed to put the thrall of human will on others.
-
-Throughout the afternoon, and time after time during the interminable
-night, the sorrel tried to break away, but with each sickening failure
-he grew more cautious. When he ran against the rope now, he did not run
-blindly to its limit, but half wheeled, so that when it jerked him back
-he invariably landed on his feet. Corazón was learning hard, but he was
-learning. And what agonies of pain and suspense he went through!--for
-years a free rover, and now to be bound thus, by what looked to be a
-mere thread, for he knew not what further tortures! He sweated and
-shivered, seeing peril in every shadow. When a coyote slunk by with
-tongue lapping hungrily over his teeth, the prisoner almost broke his
-neck in a despairing struggle to win freedom.
-
-In the chill of the dawn they led him into a circular corral. His
-sleekness had departed; the barrel-like body did not look so well
-nourished, and there was red in the blazing eyes.
-
-“I reckon he’ll be mean,” observed the buster, as though it concerned
-him but little.
-
-“No-o-o. Go easy with him, Carl, and I think he’ll make a good hoss,”
-the boss cautioned.
-
-While two men held the rope, Mullins advanced along it foot by foot,
-inch by inch, one hand outstretched, and talked to Corazón in a low,
-careless tone of affectionate banter. “So you’d like for to kill me,
-would you?” he inquired, grinning. All the while he held the sorrel’s
-gaze.
-
-Corazón stood still, legs planted wide apart, and permitted him to
-approach. He trembled when the fingers touched his nose; but they were
-firm, confident digits, the voice was reassuring, and the gentle rubbing
-up, up between the eyes and ears lulled his forebodings.
-
-“Hand me the blanket,” said Mullins.
-
-He drew it softly over Corazón’s back, and the broncho swerved, pawed,
-and kicked with beautiful precision. Whereupon they placed a rope around
-his neck, dropped it behind his right hind leg, then pulled that member
-up close to his belly; there it was held fast. On three legs now, the
-sorrel was impotent for harm. Mullins once more took up the blanket but
-this time the gentleness had flown. He slapped it over Corazón’s
-backbone from side to side a dozen times. At each impact the horse
-humped awkwardly, but, finding that he came to no hurt, he suffered it
-in resignation.
-
-That much of the second lesson learned, they saddled him. Strangely
-enough, Corazón submitted to the operation without fuss, the only
-untoward symptoms being a decided upward slant to the back of the saddle
-and the tucking of his tail. Reb waggled his head over this exhibition.
-
-“I don’t like his standing quiet that away; it ain’t natural,” he
-vouchsafed. “Look at the crick in his back. Jim-in-ee! he’ll shore
-pitch.”
-
-Which he did. The cinches were tightened until Corazón’s eyes almost
-popped from his head; then they released the bound leg and turned him
-loose. What was that galling his spine? Corazón took a startled peep at
-it, lowered his head between his knees, and began to bawl. Into the air
-he rocketed, his head and forelegs swinging to the left, his hind
-quarters weaving to the right. The jar of his contact with the ground
-was appalling. Into the air again, his head and forelegs to the right,
-his rump twisted to the left. Round and round the corral he went,
-blatting like an angry calf; but the thing on his back stayed where it
-was, gripping his body cruelly. At last he was fain to stop for breath.
-
-“Now,” said Mullins, “I reckon I’ll take it out of him.”
-
-There has always been for me an overwhelming fascination in watching
-busters at work. They have underlying traits in common when it comes to
-handling the horses--the garrulous one becomes coldly watchful, the
-Stoic moves with stern patience, the boaster soothes with soft-crooned
-words and confident caress. Mullins left Corazón standing in the middle
-of the corral, the hackamore rope strung loose on the ground, while he
-saw to it that his spurs were fast. We mounted the fence, not wishing to
-be mixed in the glorious turmoil to follow.
-
-“I wouldn’t top ol’ Corazón for fifty,” confessed the man on the
-adjoining post.
-
-“Mullins has certainly got nerve,” I conceded.
-
-“A buster has got to have nerve.” The range boss delivered himself
-laconically. “All nerve and no brains makes the best. But they get stove
-up and then--”
-
-“And then? What then?”
-
-“Why, don’t you know?” he asked in surprise. “Every buster loses his
-nerve at last, and then they can’t ride a pack-hoss. It must be because
-it’s one fool man with one set of nerves up ag’in a new hoss with a new
-devil in him every time. They wear him down. Don’t you reckon?”
-
-The explanation sounded plausible. Mullins was listening with a faintly
-amused smile to Reb’s account of what a lady mule had done to him; he
-rolled a cigarette and lighted it painstakingly. The hands that held the
-match were steady as eternal rock. It was maddening to see him stand
-there so coolly while the big sorrel, a dozen feet distant, was a-quake
-with dread, blowing harshly through his crimson nostrils whenever a
-cowboy stirred--and each of us knowing that the man was taking his life
-in his hands. An unlooked-for twist, a trifling disturbance of poise,
-and, with a horse like Corazón, it meant maiming or death. At last he
-threw the cigarette from him and walked slowly to the rope.
-
-“So you’re calling for me?” he inquired, gathering it up.
-
-Corazón was snorting. By patient craft Reb acquired a grip on the
-sorrel’s ears, and, while he hung there, bringing the head down so that
-the horse could not move, Mullins tested the stirrups and raised himself
-cautiously into the saddle.
-
-“Let him go.”
-
-While one could count ten, Corazón stood expectant, his back bowed, his
-tail between his legs. The ears were laid flat on the head and the
-forefeet well advanced. The buster waited, the quirt hanging from two
-fingers of his right hand. Suddenly the sorrel ducked his head and
-emitted a harsh scream, leaping, with legs stiff, straight off the
-ground. He came down with the massive hips at an angle to the shoulders,
-thereby imparting a double shock; bounded high again, turned back with
-bewildering speed as he touched the earth; and then, in a circle perhaps
-twenty feet in diameter, sprang time after time, his heels lashing the
-air. Never had such pitching been seen on the Anvil Range.
-
-“I swan, he just misses his tail a’ inch when he turns back!” roared a
-puncher.
-
-Mullins sat composedly in the saddle, but he was riding as never before.
-He whipped the sorrel at every jump and raked him down the body from
-shoulder to loins with the ripping spurs. The brute gave no signs of
-letting up. Through Mullins’ tan of copper hue showed a slight pallor.
-He was exhausted. If Corazón did not give in soon, the man would be
-beaten. Just then the horse stopped, feet a-sprawl.
-
-“Mullins,”--the range boss got down from the fence,--“you’ll kill that
-hoss. Between the cinches belongs to you; the head and hind quarters is
-the company’s.”
-
-For a long minute Mullins stared at the beast’s ears without replying.
-
-“I reckon that’s the rule,” he acquiesced heavily. “Do you want that
-somebody else should ride him?”
-
-“No-o-o. Go ahead. But, remember, between the cinches you go at him as
-you like--nowhere else.”
-
-[Illustration: “_Leaping, with legs stiff, straight off the ground_”]
-
-The buster slapped the quirt down on Corazón’s shoulder, but the broncho
-did not budge; then harder. With the first oath he had used, he jabbed
-in the spurs and lay back on the hackamore rope. Instead of bucking,
-Corazón reared straight up, his feet pawing like the hands of a drowning
-man. Before Mullins could move to step off, the sorrel flung his head
-round and toppled backward.
-
-“No, he’s not dead.” The range boss leaned over the buster and his hands
-fumbled inside the shirt. “The horn got him here, but he ain’t dead.
-Claude, saddle Streak and hit for Agua Prieta for the doctor.”
-
-When we had carried the injured man to the bunk-house, Reb spoke from
-troubled meditation:
-
-“Pete, I don’t believe Corazón is as bad as he acts with Mullins. I’ve
-been watching him. Mullins, he didn’t--”
-
-“You take him, then; he’s yours,” snapped the boss, his conscience
-pricking because of the reproof he had administered. If the buster had
-ridden him his own way, this might not have happened.
-
-That is how the sorrel came into Reb’s possession. Only one man of the
-outfit witnessed the taming, and he would not talk; but when Reb came to
-dinner from the first saddle on Corazón, his hands were torn and the
-nail of one finger hung loose.
-
-“I had to take to the horn and hang on some,” he admitted.
-
-Ay, he had clung there desperately while the broncho pitched about the
-river-bed, whither Reb had retired for safety and to escape spectators.
-But at the next saddle Corazón was less violent; at the third,
-recovering from the stunning shocks and bruisings of the first day, he
-was a fiend; and then, on the following morning, he did not pitch at
-all. Reb rode him every day to sap the superfluous vigor in Corazón’s
-iron frame and he taught him as well as he could the first duties of a
-cowhorse. Finding that his new master never punished him unless he
-undertook to dispute his authority, the sorrel grew tractable and began
-to take an interest in his tasks.
-
-“He’s done broke,” announced Reb; “I’ll have him bridle-wise in a week.
-He’ll make some roping horse. Did you see him this evening? I swan--”
-
-They scoffed good-naturedly; but Reb proceeded on the assumption that
-Corazón was meant to be a roping horse, and schooled him accordingly. As
-for the sorrel, he took to the new pastime with delight. Within a month
-nothing gave him keener joy than to swerve and crouch at the climax of a
-sprint and see a cow thrown heels over head at the end of the rope that
-was wrapped about his saddle-horn.
-
-The necessity of contriving to get three meals a day took me elsewhere,
-and I did not see Corazón again for three years. Then, one Sunday
-afternoon, Big John drew me from El Paso to Juarez on the pretense of
-seeing a grand, an extraordinary, a most noble bull-fight, in which the
-dauntless Favorita would slay three fierce bulls from the renowned El
-Carmen ranch, in “competency” with the fearless Morenito Chico de San
-Bernardo; and a youth with a megaphone drew us both to a steer-roping
-contest instead. We agreed that bull-fighting was brutal on the Sabbath.
-
-“I’ll bet it’s rotten,” remarked Big John pessimistically, as we took
-our seats. “I could beat ’em myself.”
-
-As he scanned the list, his face brightened. Among the seventeen ropers
-thereon were two champions and a possible new one in Raphael Fraustro,
-the redoubtable vaquero from the domain of Terrazas.
-
-“And here’s Reb!” roared John--he is accustomed to converse in the
-tumult of the branding-pen--“I swan, he’s entered from Monument.”
-
-Shortly afterwards the contestants paraded, wonderfully arrayed in silk
-shirts and new handkerchiefs.
-
-“Some of them ain’t been clean before in a year,” was John’s caustic
-comment. “There’s Slim; I KNOW he hasn’t.”
-
-They were a fine-looking body of men, and two of my neighbors complained
-that I trampled on their feet. The horses caught the infection of
-excitement from the packed stands and champed on their bits and
-caracoled and waltzed sideways in a manner highly unbecoming a staid
-cow-pony.
-
-There was one that did not. So sluggish was his gait and general
-bearing, in contrast to the others, that the crowd burst into laughter.
-He plodded at the tail-end of the procession, his hoofs kicking up the
-dust in listless spurts, his nose on a level with his knees. I rubbed my
-eyes and John said, “No, it ain’t--it can’t be--”; but it was. Into that
-arena slouched Corazón, entered against the pick of the horses of the
-Southwest; and Reb was astride him.
-
-We watched the ropers catch and tie the steers in rapid succession, but
-the much-heralded ones missed altogether, and to John and me the
-performance lagged. We were waiting for Reb and Corazón.
-
-They came at last, at the end of the list. When Corazón ambled up the
-arena to enter behind the barrier, the grandstand roared a facetious
-welcome; the spectacle of this sad-gaited nag preparing to capture a
-steer touched its risibilities.
-
-“Listen to me,” bawled a fat gentleman in a wide-brimmed hat, close to
-my ear. “You listen to me! They’re all fools. That’s a cowhorse. No
-blasted nonsense. Knows his business, huh? You’re damn whistlin’!”
-
-Assuredly, Corazón knew his business. The instant he stepped behind the
-line he was a changed horse. The flopping ears pricked forward, his neck
-arched, and the great muscles of his shoulders and thighs rippled to his
-dainty prancing. He pulled and fretted on the bit, his eyes roving about
-in search of the quarry; he whinnied an appeal to be gone. Reb made
-ready his coil, curbing him with light pressure.
-
-Out from the chute sprang a steer, heading straight down the arena.
-Corazón was frantic. With the flash of the gun he breasted the
-barrier-rope and swept down on him in twenty strides. Reb stood high in
-the stirrups; the loop whirled and sped; and, without waiting to see how
-it fell, but accepting a catch in blind faith, the sorrel started off at
-a tangent.
-
-Big John was standing up in his place, clawing insanely at the hats of
-his neighbors and banging them on the head with his programme.
-
-“Look at him--just look at him!” he shrieked.
-
-The steer was tossed clear of the ground and came down on his left side.
-Almost before he landed, Reb was out of the saddle and speeding toward
-him.
-
-“He’s getting up. HE’S GETTING UP. Go to him, Reb!” howled John and I.
-
-The steer managed to lift his head; he was struggling to his knees. I
-looked away, for Reb must lose. Then a hoarse shout from the multitude
-turned back my gaze. Corazón had felt the slack on the rope and knew
-what it meant. He dug his feet into the dirt and began to walk slowly
-forward--very slowly and carefully, for Reb’s task must not be spoiled.
-The steer collapsed, falling prone again, but the sorrel did not stop.
-Once he cocked his eye, and seeing that the animal still squirmed,
-pulled with all his strength. The stands were rocking; they were a sea
-of tossing hats and gesticulating arms and flushed faces; the roar of
-their plaudits echoed back from the hills. And it was all for Corazón,
-gallant Corazón.
-
-“Dam’ his eyes--dam’ his ol’ eyes!” Big John babbled over and over,
-absolutely oblivious.
-
-Reb stooped beside the steer, his hands looping and tying with deft
-darting twists even as he kept pace with his dragged victim.
-
-“I guess it’s--about--a--hour,” he panted.
-
-Then he sprang clear and tossed his hands upward, facing the judges’
-stand. After that he walked aimlessly about, mopping his face with a
-handkerchief; for to him the shoutings and the shifting colors were all
-a foolish dream, and he was rather sick.
-
-Right on the cry with which his master announced his task done, Corazón
-eased up on the rope and waited.
-
-“Mr. Pee-ler’s time,” bellowed the man with the megaphone presently, “is
-twenty-one seconds, ty-ing the world’s re-cord.”
-
-So weak that his knees trembled, Reb walked over to his horse.
-“Corazón,” he said huskily, and slapped him once on the flank.
-
-Nothing would do the joyous crowd then but that Reb should ride forth to
-be acclaimed the victor. We sat back and yelled ourselves weak with
-laughter, for Corazón, having done his work, refused resolutely to
-squander time in vain parade. The steer captured and tied, he had no
-further interest in the proceedings. The rascal dog-trotted reluctantly
-to the center of the arena in obedience to Reb, then faced the audience;
-but, all the time Reb was bowing his acknowledgments, Corazón sulked and
-slouched, and he was sulking and shuffling the dust when they went
-through the gate.
-
-“Now,” said John, who is very human, “we’ll go help Reb spend that
-money.”
-
-As we jostled amid the outgoing crowd, several cowboys came alongside
-the grandstand rail, and Big John drew me aside to have speech with
-them. One rider led a spare horse and when he passed a man on foot, the
-latter hailed him:
-
-“Say, Ed, give me a lift to the hotel?”
-
-“Sure,” answered Ed, proffering the reins.
-
-The man gathered them up, his hands fluttering as if with palsy, and
-paused with his foot raised toward the stirrup.
-
-“He won’t pitch nor nothing, Ed?” came the quavered inquiry. “You’re
-shore he’s gentle?”
-
-“Gentler’n a dog,” returned Ed, greatly surprised.
-
-“You ain’t fooling me, now, are you, Ed?” continued the man on the
-ground. “He looks kind of mean.”
-
-“Give him to me!” Ed exploded. “You kin walk.”
-
-From where we stood, only the man’s back was visible. “Who is that
-fellow?” I asked.
-
-“Who? Him?” answered my neighbor. “Oh, his name’s Mullins. They say he
-used to be able to ride anything with hair on it, and throw off the
-bridle at that. I expect that’s just talk. Don’t you reckon?”
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE OUTLAW
-
-
-Steve was recounting an episode of Hell’s Acre.
-
-“And jist as I was fighting my horse to make him go through that
-scrub-oak, he done stubbed his toe in the sand. Up she come with a
-whoof--one of them ol’ long-horns. That cow had hid herself there. Yes,
-sir; but she didn’t quite git her horns covered.”
-
-Reb said he could well believe it. No longer ago than last Tuesday,
-while chasing some stubborn cattle, he had chanced upon a cow lying flat
-behind a bush. A jackrabbit was burying her under leaves, for better
-concealment.
-
-Whereupon the two got to horse and rode away, leaving behind them a
-thoughtful silence.
-
-There was a water-gap to be repaired and they headed for the Salt Fork
-of the Brazos.
-
-“Wait a minute,” said Steve. “Look there.”
-
-A cow stood on the crest of a rise--a lean, dun creature, with distended
-eyes. When they approached, she trotted off to the right, mumbling
-anxiously. They did not follow. Then she stopped, her head erect and
-nostrils dilated, to watch them. The two ambled forward and she kept
-near, very, very anxious.
-
-“She’s got a calf hid out somewheres,” Reb remarked.
-
-He surveyed the immediate country leisurely, confident of what he would
-discover. Two hundred yards in front was a patch of mesquite, and they
-made for it. Behind a bush they found the calf--a sturdy, red-and-white
-baby with a specially black, moist nose. It flattened out when Steve
-stood over it.
-
-“Git up,” he commanded, “I want to see more of you. I bet them hoofs of
-yours is soft.”
-
-The calf hugged the ground. He raised the sagging body by the brisket
-and tail, none too gently. When he let go, the little fellow collapsed,
-spread out like a jellyfish. He must have marveled as he lay there,
-rolling his wide, questioning eyes upward, what strange beings these
-were, for he was just one day old and had never seen a man.
-
-“Come a li’l’ seven,” Steve cried joyously. “Look a-here, Reb. See his
-face.”
-
-Between the youngster’s eyes was a crimson splash which made a perfect
-7. Reb examined the peculiar marking with interest and suggested that
-Come-a-Seven might bring the little devil luck as a name.
-
-The calf resented all this handling and raised his voice in a plaintive
-bawl. As they loped away on their errand, the cow crashed through the
-bushes to her offspring’s side. She nosed him solicitously, rumbling
-caresses.
-
-Come-a-Seven inherited all the hardiness of his race--indeed, in later
-years, Reb vowed that he was tougher’n the oldest man in the world. Half
-an hour after his advent into this vale of tears he could walk. It was
-not a gait to justify boasting, because his forelegs showed a tendency
-to give at unexpected places, but he saved himself from a fall by
-leaning against his mother’s shoulder. He next made the circuit of the
-cow twice in a clumsy hunt for the fount of his food supply and finally
-reached it in an extremely awkward position. Nevertheless, she watched
-him pridefully, her sight blurred with happiness; and braced against her
-hind leg, he fed like a glutton. Feeling full and reckless therefrom, he
-humped his back in abandon and tried to cavort, but came down with a
-jarring thump.
-
-The young mother did her duty by him like a Scotch washerwoman with nine
-children. He breakfasted at dawn--drank until he could drink no more.
-Afterwards she went off to graze, leaving the calf behind some screening
-hush. It was seldom she strayed so far that she was not within sight or
-call: there is danger to toddling calves that lie out on the range
-unprotected.
-
-How fast his strength grew! At five days of age he could have butted
-into a wooden fence at half-speed without any especially ill effects,
-save to the fence. Yet his mother’s care never abated. She would go over
-him every night with eager tenderness and was ever aggressively on the
-alert to defend. For she would have fought anything on four legs for the
-life of that loose-jointed, red-and-white blatherskite she held to be
-prince of his race.
-
-The cattle grazed in scattered bunches over some hundred thousand acres
-of the east range--they are not so companionable as horses and do not
-herd so closely in their feeding. Nor will the bulls take such
-responsibilities upon their shoulders as do stallions with the mares and
-colts. Come-a-Seven, in fact, never saw his father, to his knowledge.
-That ponderous, morose scion of Hereford stock lived his own life in his
-own way, spending half the day sleeping in the shade of a cottonwood;
-and he did not worry about family matters. His scores of children might
-fare as best they could. In the meantime he had his amusements. Besides,
-what on earth were their mothers for?
-
-On his eighth day Come-a-Seven started out to see something of the
-world. No great variety offered within his ken--a rolling expanse,
-green-gray, gashed by numerous brick-red gullies; hundreds of scraggy
-mesquite bushes and some prickly-pear; two or three regal cottonwoods on
-the bank of a creek, whose sandy bed was a third of a mile wide; beyond,
-a butte lifting from the earth like a monstrous mushroom. That was what
-he saw--that, and big blue blotches of shadows moving over the country
-like an army of specters. Piles of tumbled white clouds gave promise of
-rain at a later date.
-
-Upon this the red-and-white gazed, his head moving from side to side in
-jerks, ears twitching, tail straight out as when he fed. He was trying
-to get up nerve to sally farther afield. As a starter and a spur to
-courage he curveted clumsily, but was brought up short by the sight of
-another calf of about his own age, standing not a dozen yards away,
-surveying him with the liveliest interest. Come-a-Seven tried to look
-hostile, even threatening, but his curiosity got the better of him,
-because the calf into whose face he glared had the merest stump of a
-tail.
-
-Advancing a step, he intimated in his own peculiar, gruff calf-manner
-that the abbreviated member puzzled him. If Come-a-Seven had ever dodged
-a coyote, he would not have been so ignorant. The other evinced no
-resentment and they approached in amicable fashion, made a playful butt
-at each other and became fast friends. After that they would loaf about
-together in the hot summer days, making trouble for the other calves and
-stirring up bickerings and feuds.
-
-None of them was of a serious nature. The nearest approach to a tragic
-ending happened when the red-and-white smashed, full tilt, into a
-six-months’-old half-brother, of whose relationship he was ignorant--not
-that this would have made any difference--and knocked him off the steep
-wall of a tank into the water. He had to run at that, for the other was
-a husky, ardent calf, and he was angry all through. When he scrambled
-out, he went hunting for the red-and-white, but by that time the
-offender was safely under his mother’s eye, which fact he flaunted
-brazenly.
-
-Who ever saw a braver pair? Who so bold as the tailless one and
-Come-a-Seven when there was no possibility of danger? Then, at the first
-hint of trouble, up would go their tails and they would run to their
-mothers at their very best pace.
-
-They were learning, too, for many things they saw carried lessons to
-their youthful perceptions. They were witnesses of the finish of a
-wild-cat, which a puncher roped out of a tree under which they had been
-taking a nap. They saw a companion die slowly from blackleg, and another
-practically eaten alive by the fearful screw-worm. For days, too, they
-avoided an old cow whose head was swelled to twice its natural size. The
-poor creature was the victim of a snake bite, but she survived.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Ow-oo-yah! Ow-oo-yah! Ow-oo-yah! Ki-yi! Git up, cattle.”
-
-A shrill whistle brought the red-and-white to his feet with a jerk just
-as the sun tinted the eastern sky to gray and gold and rose. He bellowed
-an inquiry to his mother, and for a second stood irresolute. A horseman
-came riding at top speed straight for them, hallooing with all his might
-and waving his hat. Whereupon the calf waited for no instructions. He
-let himself out for all he was worth.
-
-The puncher rode at a hand-gallop behind and he did not drive too hard.
-Instead, he gave them a shove in the direction he desired they should
-travel, and, with a final shout, swung away to the right, where a bunch
-of six rose up with a snort and gave him a chase. He calculated that the
-cow would keep going and she did. Her slow march was marked by protests
-from her hopeful offspring. Observing that the rider was busy stirring
-up cattle in many directions, his baby mind could conceive of no good
-reason for plugging along in a line dead ahead because this individual
-had furnished the impetus for the start. So he grumbled much, but
-trotted along obediently, notwithstanding; and presently his own
-grievances were dissipated by the contemplation of what was happening
-around him. Every patch of brush in the country appeared to be turning
-out cows, calves and young steers, as a magician’s bag scatters paper
-roses. In several bunches he recognized acquaintances, but they were too
-concerned about the future to do more than give a hurried squall of
-recognition. An enormous procession was under way and they were marching
-in it, a part of it. Whither would it lead them?
-
-Apparently this speculation was likewise a source of worry to the cows
-and steers, though they all had been through much the same before. Yet,
-for the most part, they went soberly, falling into the semblance of a
-trail-herd as their ranks were swelled by others which the cowboys
-roused up; but there were some that did not. Occasionally a heifer would
-make a break to one side, only to be headed off; and once a cow, driven
-too impetuously, jerked her head sideways and bowed her tail. She was
-“on the prod,” and they let her go. Time after time, when the
-red-and-white would turn about to gaze, a rider would come at him,
-slapping his boot with his quirt and whistling. This constant
-surveillance irritated Come-a-Seven.
-
-Their ranks were swelling so fast, too, that his identity, and hence his
-sense of security, was lost. Another influx of cattle caused him to
-carom off his mother’s side and in puerile anger he butted at those
-nearest, until he observed he was making no impression, when,
-discouraged, he gave it up and moved along. His tiny troubles were
-submerged in that great army. Two thousand cattle were converging upon a
-plain, from nine points in an area five miles wide.
-
-Come-a-Seven was almost too interested to be scared.
-
-Clouds of dust welling up; a babel of sound; mighty roarings of irate
-bulls, petty monarchs now on a common footing they resented; the lowing
-of cows and the frightened bawling of the calves; and always a
-bewildering churning and shifting like a maelstrom. Every few minutes a
-stream of dirt would shoot skyward like a geyser, where a bull was
-spoiling for a fight and sent his thundering challenge over the ranks.
-Occasionally there was a clash and some desperate attempts at goring.
-Holding this host on the round-up ground was a cordon of eight punchers,
-sitting apathetically on their horses. They had little to do while their
-companions worked the herd, cutting out the cows and calves to one side,
-the strays and beef cattle to another. Sometimes an animal would wander
-to the edge, stand staring uncertainly, then saunter forth to attain the
-open; but most were driven back without trouble. One persisted and gave
-a herder a furious dash to head him off; but that was all part of the
-day’s work.
-
-When the cutters penetrated the dust and came threading their way
-through the noisy, restless horde, the calf became doubly uneasy. A man
-on a blazed-face bay was particularly insistent. Come-a-Seven watched
-him work deviously through the entire herd after a cow and her young,
-and drive them forth to the open; so he tried to keep out of sight. But
-it was no use. Soon the horse was close to them, and mother and son
-felt, rather than saw, that they were the objects of the quiet
-maneuvering that followed. Wherever they dodged and doubled the
-blazed-face was sure to be there, close behind, patient, untiring. A
-wave of resentment against this steady pressure broke them into a run,
-and, before they knew it, the outer rim of cattle split wide open and
-they were beyond the herd. In a panic they endeavored to dart back, but
-the big bay interposed. Seeing this, the cow sped toward a draw where
-the scrub-cedar appeared to offer chances of escape. With the speed of
-light the puncher was after them, twisting, wheeling, heading her off
-toward the cut-bunch. And the calf found the same indefatigable foe
-between him and freedom when he emulated his mother.
-
-“Git in, you low-lived whelp,” howled the cutter, and he spurred
-furiously.
-
-They finally gave up the contest as hopeless and trotted meekly to join
-the bunch of cattle they perceived ahead of them.
-
-There were cows which shot from the herd at a gallop and then would
-break to a hesitating trot, their heads nodding loosely close to the
-ground. Their gait had an odd uncertainty about it. The animals would
-shrink from a weed and draw back. One stopped at perceiving a shadow and
-went around it fearfully.
-
-“Locoed,” a puncher commented. For these had eaten of the strange loco
-weed and were afflicted.
-
-By ten o’clock, the herd was worked. Fires were lighted and the branding
-irons thrust into them.
-
-The roper and flankers got into action, two sets of them, and every
-minute calves emitted protesting wails as the hot irons seared their
-sides. He worked like an automaton, that roper. He seemed removed from
-human passions, remote from the ordinary human impulses. His loop
-dropped unerringly, and back the horse would go at a trot or a lope,
-with a panic-stricken, crying calf plunging, bumping along in rear,
-sometimes turning somersaults--for life is too short to carry calves to
-the flankers with solicitous care, though possibly the flankers would
-prefer them that way.
-
-The red-and-white edged away from the field of this gentleman’s labors
-and ran straight in front of a sorrel horse.
-
-Baw-aw-aw-aw-aw-aw! he cried, as something settled about his neck and a
-resistless force commenced to drag him into the open.
-
-Another roper had snared him. He humped his back and began to buck, his
-legs rigid. At every leap into the air he blatted and protested. His
-mother shrank back in confusion at the first outcry and lost sight of
-him in the dust raised by his unwilling progress. For fully thirty yards
-he was dragged in a series of hurtling leaps, with the rope cutting into
-his neck so that he could scarcely breathe; and then, before he had time
-to recover his faculties, a man seized the rope, ran along it until he
-reached the red-and-white, and reaching over his body, flopped him in
-the air. But the calf was not flanked so easily--not Come-a-Seven. Twice
-he rebounded like a rubber ball, finding his feet before his antagonist
-could fall on him.
-
-“Stay-ay-ay with him, Steve! Go to him, boy!” shrieked the delighted
-flankers.
-
-“Durn his hide. He’s stout as a weaner,” Steve snorted; and he gave a
-tremendous heave. At the same time he made a short spring forward with
-knees crooked, which carried him under the calf as that strenuous
-combatant tried to make his hoofs hit the ground first. The
-red-and-white came down with a bump that sounded like the unloading of a
-trunk marked, “Handle with care.” It would have broken the ribs of
-anything aged three months except a calf.
-
-“Holy cats, it’s Come-a-Seven,” Steve panted. He sat back of his head,
-with a knee on the neck, and twisted one foreleg in a jiu-jitsu grip
-that paralyzed all effort. Another puncher at his other extremity got a
-vise-like hold of the left leg and put the other out of commission by
-thrusting it far forward with his foot.
-
-Oh-oh-oh-uh-uh-uh-ah!
-
-The cry was almost human, and the eyes bulged and rolled with terror
-until the whites showed. The iron had touched him, biting through his
-coat into the flesh, while the smoke curled up with smell of burning
-hair. His fright needed just that pang to get proper vocal expression,
-and he used all his available breath in a frantic appeal to the mother
-that bore him. It was not in vain.
-
-“Look out! Here she comes!” yelled a flanker.
-
-The three working over the calf looked up to see the cow trotting toward
-them. There was no time to dodge. When she was within ten feet of the
-group an idle flanker kicked a jet of sand into her face and she swerved
-irresolutely, coming to a walk. The roper drove her back and work was
-resumed on her son.
-
-“I mind once, when I was with the Spur, a cow jumped clean over us
-that-a-way,” remarked Bill Kennedy, rising from the ground. As a parting
-salute he rolled the red-and-white over his hip, as a wrestler throws a
-man to the mat. “Say, Jake, heel them big fellers.”
-
-The calf was scared, and sore all over. A swallow-fork in the right ear
-and a crop in the left worried him. He stood glowering in all
-directions, in an effort to get his bearings; then he executed some
-shuddering, half-hearted jumps, as though trying to shed the two burning
-letters on his left flank, and sought his mother. He was sick, and all
-the fight gone from him.
-
-The herd was driven off and released, and the red-and-white went with
-them. He tarried in a draw, enduring great pain. A fever burned him,
-too, and he was low in spirits. Half of his enormous appetite was gone,
-but only half. Alas, he had lost the source of supply for even the
-remnant that remained. In the general confusion he had become separated
-from his mother, and, as it was meal-time, the loss was doubly
-distressing.
-
-He lifted up his voice in a song of sorrow, but naught availed.
-Perceiving this, he started to find her. The cow was hunting for him,
-too, hunting frenziedly. And she was not alone in her grief, for at
-least a dozen cows had lost their young in the turmoil of branding, and
-they wandered up and down and across without cessation, lowing
-pathetically, a world of distress in their tones and in their eyes. From
-time to time one would sight a stray calf and make a bee line for it,
-but only to give a moan of disappointment and resume her hunt.
-
-Come-a-Seven tried to establish filial relations with every cow he met.
-As a result, he got some rebuffs that would have discouraged a less
-hungry youngster. For hours he searched; for hours cows wandered about
-crying for their young. Twice the red-and-white essayed to feed where he
-had no blood-rights and nearly had his ribs stove in for his pains.
-Finally, made crafty by hunger, he softly shouldered another calf away
-from her place at the mother’s side and tried to substitute. The old cow
-properly kicked him for that trick.
-
-But his hunger was short-lived; a familiar voice smote upon his ear, his
-answering cry came with a glad quiver in it, and mother and son were
-reunited. How she smelled of him and licked his dusty sides and neck!
-And the way he went for his meal! She gave a deep rumble of content.
-Even when Come-a-Seven butted cruelly with his head, in his consuming
-hunger, and hurt her, she lowed in proud satisfaction.
-
-Pain and trouble cannot last forever. In a week his wounds had healed;
-he was sound and strong again. Once more began the long, idle days of
-good feeding and play with his young companions. His life was a full
-one. Compared with that of the barnyard variety of the genus calf, it
-was as checkered as a drummer’s appears to a hot-blooded resident of a
-country town.
-
-In the winter his mother grew gaunt. The cold was intense at times, and
-the snowfall was greater than the oldest bull could recall. At rare
-intervals men came riding to inspect and on one visit drove some of the
-weaker cattle to the home pasture, there to be fed daily. For the others
-little could be done, and the red-and-white was one of them. There were
-many good windbreaks on the range and the calf was tough, so he won
-through somehow, though once when the snow drifted deep and the cow
-could not find grass in her wanderings, grim death stared them in the
-face. The calf himself went three days without a meal, yet lived. A cow
-will not paw down through the snow like a horse, and mother and son saw
-some of their friends perish.
-
-Spring came at last--suddenly, like a mountain sunrise--and the earth
-was exceeding glad. Worried and emaciated, they greeted the season of
-hope with a sudden access of energy. In later months the red-and-white
-was weaned. He learned to eat grass, of which accomplishment he was at
-first inordinately proud, and he throve on it; and he had but one worry
-in the world--heel flies.
-
-It has been said that Come-a-Seven was lusty. He was an amazing big
-fellow for his age. When round-up time arrived again and he was herded
-with about fourteen hundred cattle, he grew chesty over the fact that he
-sized up well with most of the two-year-olds. His strength and restless
-energy were proportionate.
-
-Indeed, Come-a-Seven bade fair to be a rounder. While the other cattle
-would be sleeping peacefully on the bed-ground, the young red-and-white
-would go up and down through the herd, trying to start some excitement.
-He always chose to walk straight through the center of the recumbent
-host, and where he passed all got to their feet uneasily. The tired old
-cows would grumble at him and tell him to go to bed, but he was proof
-against all reproaches and conscience he had none.
-
-“Damn him,” grumbled a puncher on guard as he watched his wanderings for
-the twentieth time, and for the twentieth time turned and drove back
-some who tried to walk out at his prompting. “He’s playing for a
-stompede.”
-
-“I swan if it ain’t Come-a-Seven!” remarked Steve, when the
-red-and-white passed very near him. “Git to bed, Come-a-Seven. I reckon
-you’re a rake.”
-
-When tired of his solitary roaming, the red-and-white would select some
-young steer weaker than himself, butt him off the bed he had warmed, and
-compose himself to slumber. Whereat a great sigh of satisfaction would
-be heard mingled with the blowing of the cattle.
-
-Another year passed. When the cowboys came whooping up the cattle in the
-following August, the red-and-white heard the loud shoutings and saw,
-with contemptuous resentment, his fellow-creatures being propelled
-toward the round-up ground. Their meekness awoke hot rebellion in him.
-Big he was now and of the strength of two. He decided he would not go.
-
-A rider caught him unawares and the surprise of his first rush started
-the steer in the right direction, but it failed to keep him there; for
-as soon as the man departed to drive another bunch, the red-and-white
-went off at a tangent. Far had he wandered in his day, and he knew some
-brakes--miles, miles away--where the foot of horse seldom trod. Toward
-these he headed. Two hundred, three hundred yards, and behind him he
-heard the familiar scramble of the pursuer. The red-and-white flagged
-his tail and let out another notch.
-
-“Quit it, you Come-a-Seven!” Steve bawled. “Blast you, git in there.”
-
-The two-year-old only ran the harder, but the pony gained. Then he lost
-his temper and made up his mind that whether or not the cowboy overtook
-him he would reach those brakes; if necessary he would turn about and
-attack. His head swayed from side to side, his gait became uncertain and
-he seemed worried--symptoms which were not lost on Steve. When the steer
-stopped and faced about, the horse turned like a flash, and as he did so
-a loud, querulous voice, raised in helpless anger, broke up Steve’s
-programme. That voice changed the red-and-white’s destiny. Indirectly it
-saved him from the stockyards; but, then, he would probably have saved
-himself.
-
-“Let him go, Steve! You’ll lose that other bunch,” the wagon boss cried.
-“We’ll get him again.”
-
-Steve waved his hat at the steer with a good-natured grin and shook up
-his horse, departing like a rocket to his work. The red-and-white
-continued on toward the brakes.
-
-That is how he became an outlaw.
-
-In the vast Croton brakes were scores such as he. Some of them were
-grown old and hoary, and they bore many brands. A few had no brands. All
-had run wild for years, and round-ups were things of the long ago. So
-shy were they that it was as difficult for a man to approach them as to
-stalk a herd of antelope. They kept in bands of five and six, and did
-anything come near which one did not understand, they were off like
-deer.
-
-The red-and-white took to the life as his birth-right. Somewhere in him
-ran a strain that drove resistlessly to solitude and the wilds; and he
-was happy. More than once he had to fight, but he possessed an
-unbeatable temper and had a world of craft to direct his agility and
-colossal strength, so that he came from his battles with blood-dripping
-horns held high and proudly.
-
-Rough and torn and forbidding were the brakes--miles on miles of
-red-walled cañons, of scrub cedar and sand-rock--but the feeding was
-good for so few when one knew the best places, and the outlaw waxed ever
-stronger. His horns spread, too.
-
-Five years sped by and the outlaw fought his way to kingship.
-
-On a December day he was startled by the noise of firing. Such sounds he
-had never heard. It was not the snappy, sharp report of the six-shooter,
-but louder and of heavier metal. Suddenly fear took hold of him. There
-was a hunt on--a hunt of outlaws. The horns of the free steers would
-bring high prices, and once in a generation a party of punchers came
-thus with rifles to gather them. Come-a-Seven let out a bellow and tore
-away at the head of his followers.
-
-It was a terrible day for the outlaws of the Croton brakes. When the
-bunch that trailed behind the red-and-white split and scattered, the
-chase developed into mad, individual contests of speed. The outlaw could
-run; the way Come-a-Seven traveled would have made an ordinary range
-steer look like a muley cow. Up and down sheer bluffs that appeared too
-steep to climb, he ran; and cliffs seemed to be highways to him. But,
-behind, a rider spurred tenaciously, steadily diminishing the distance
-that separated them, holding his fire until he could be sure of this
-glorious prize. Up came the rifle--but it never sent forth its leaden
-messenger.
-
-“Gee whiz, if it ain’t ol’ Come-a-Seven!” cried Steve. “Git a-going,
-boy, and keep her up! Whoopee!”
-
-With a final spurt and shout the veteran puncher wheeled and came to a
-standstill, regarding the smashing run of the big steer with a smile of
-admiration. The red-and-white was already disappearing in the distance,
-far, far away from all further danger of pursuit, his tail held high,
-his head swaying. Steve watched him until he topped a rise and
-disappeared. He had lost a goodly prize; but he was content. He chuckled
-as he recalled the steer’s past misdeeds on the bed-ground.
-
-The outlaw went back to his remotest fastnesses. He may be there yet,
-boss of the Croton brakes.
-
-
-
-
- V
- SHIELA
-
-
-A panther’s scream split the whine of the wind and Shiela reared herself
-in front of the fire, her body retched by an answering challenge.
-
-“Shee-la,” her master rebuked. “Lie down, girl.”
-
-The wolfhound sank to the floor with a reluctant flop, but the hairs on
-her neck and along her spine bristled still. She continued to rumble.
-
-There were four men playing at cards in the bunkhouse. Cold weather had
-set in and the Tumbling H outfit were eating out their hearts in winter
-camps. Here at headquarters, the range boss, wagon boss, blacksmith and
-cook played half the day at seven-up and pitch; and listened to Mit’s
-varying accounts of high life in the East, as he had plumbed it in Fort
-Worth; and raved at the climate and cursed petty annoyances with the
-savage irritability of full-blooded men lacking enough to do.
-
-“Hark to that ol’ wind,” mourned the wagon boss--he was fifty and
-considered fourteen hours a day in the saddle mere child’s play--“It was
-sixty-six above this morning, and now it’s zero. No wonder a man cain’t
-be healthy.”
-
-The others nodded gravely and the cook shuffled the cards.
-
-“It’s a wonder, Steve,” he observed, “that you don’t--my deal?--you
-don’t try that dog in wolf huntin’. Not by herself, but with a bunch of
-’em.”
-
-“Wait till she’s used to the country and has got her growth. Then you’ll
-see.”
-
-Mit remarked that he referred, of course, to the hunting of coyotes,
-which prompted a passionate declaration from the wagon boss that the
-range ought to be cleared of these pests. They killed too many calves in
-bad years: poison ’em, he urged. Nobody opposed objection and they went
-on with the game. Then from the mouth of the cañon came to the ears of
-the players the vibrant cry of the lobo. Right upon it broke Shiela’s
-roar of defiance, and the beast was at the door in a bound, whimpering
-frenziedly, her terrible teeth bared. Beside her, his head three inches
-short of Shiela’s breast, Friday stiffened in sympathetic rage, his
-stubby tail wagging. He raised a shrill treble bark.
-
-“Down, Shee-la! Down, girl.” Running from the table, O’Donnell led her
-back to the fire.
-
-“Friday, you come here,” the blacksmith cried. “Lay down under the
-table, and don’t you go for to move!”
-
-Not to cattle-browsed stretches of prairie land had Shiela been reared,
-nor to vast sweep of hills and mesquite-flecked valleys, and of torn,
-brick-red sandstone and tortuous, dry river-beds. She was a stranger in
-a strange land, and her new kingdom struck to the roots of her nature.
-Far as she could wander in a frivolous all-day rabbit hunt with Friday
-was no sign of human habitation; and beyond that, away to the pale-blue
-line that must surely be the rim of all things,--full sixty miles,--no
-handiwork of man was visible. Here was an unspoiled empire, and her
-master was the autocrat. For the first time in her life the wolfhound
-drew the breath of unrestrained liberty, chafed hotly to the tang of the
-air, cast about and trailed wild creatures whose taint stirred her to
-mad longings for the chase and a fight.
-
-How can one tell of Shiela’s beauty? A great animal and a
-wonderful--light fawn in color, with a shaggy coat. Her eyes were in
-general gentle and melting. But it must be confessed that her
-proportions did not fit Shiela to be a comfort about the home, for she
-weighed a hundred and eighteen pounds and could not go under the tallest
-table without stooping. As she always forgot to stoop, her progress was
-fraught with excitement.
-
-On the day following her arrival, the cook scrambled out of bed long
-before sunup to ascertain what manner of idiot could be knocking on the
-door in this deserted region. Man alive, why couldn’t they walk in?
-Shiela leaped on him to be fondled--the wolfhound had been wagging her
-tail against the door as she lay across the threshold.
-
-“Ef I was you,” Mit suggested civilly, “I’d lay out on the range where
-you’d have room to move round. Git a nice big butte all to yourself.”
-
-Her heart and her courage were big as her body. Following O’Donnell on a
-day when he fared to Stinking Water, quite by accident she roused up a
-loafer in the cañon. Shiela flew in pursuit, deaf to O’Donnell’s frantic
-commands to come back. And when the wolf turned fiercely at bay to pit
-her might against this daring hunter, a hundred and eighteen pounds of
-dauntless pluck launched itself at her neck like a bolt from a
-storm-cloud.
-
-“She’s a dead one now,” O’Donnell groaned, circling for a shot. “She’s a
-goner, sure.”
-
-Had the wolfhound been more wary, she would have fared better. She could
-not have slain her foe; the dog does not breathe that can go to the
-death-grapple with a loafer wolf in the flush of his strength; and
-Shiela knew neither the amazing quickness of the wild, nor how to guard
-against those slashing counter-attacks. The lobo could dodge and rip
-simultaneously, using her jaws from any direction. Even when bowled over
-by the hound’s unreckoning rush, she tore Shiela’s throat with a
-backward thrust of her muzzle and was free in a twinkling. Badly cut in
-several places, dazed by the speed of the combat, the wolfhound was soon
-forced to let her go.
-
-Shiela and Friday were fast friends, albeit the diversity of dimensions
-was productive of intermittent rancor. It was Friday’s wont to rush at
-her fiercely, to seize one powerful leg in his mouth and worry it,
-whereat Shiela would hit him a playful pat that sent him reeling ten
-yards. But Friday came of a staunch breed, and he returned to the sport
-again and again. Often the wolfhound would stretch herself out on the
-ground, and thus recumbent, the fox-terrier could almost reach her head.
-Over Shiela would roll, lying on her back with legs in the air, while
-Friday snorted and grunted valorously as he shook her by the throat or
-the ear. But the fun always ended in the same way: a clumsy blow would
-catch Friday full on the head and he would dash off to his master with
-cries of pain.
-
-“Steve oughtn’t for to keep her round headquarters,” the blacksmith
-remonstrated to Dick. “She’s shore too big. Pore li’l Friday! When she
-gits into my shop, Dick, I swan her ol’ tail is like to send my tools
-flying which-ways.”
-
-“Where’d he keep her, then? He cain’t turn her out on the range to eat
-grass,” sneered Dick.
-
-The blacksmith was silenced, but there was born in him a dislike of the
-hound. It happened that, when next the terrier came yelping from play,
-O’Donnell had ridden off to a tank. The blacksmith issued from the shop
-and hurled a bolt at Shiela. She dodged, but did not run, and the
-bristles on her neck stiffened in warning.
-
-Aside from the manager, who spent much of the year with his family in
-Denver, the blacksmith was the only married man with the Tumbling H
-outfit. He had a son three years of age. Oscar was the child’s name,--a
-sturdy, ruddy-cheeked youngster he was--and from the outset he was the
-apple of Shiela’s eye. The boy could pull her ears or tail with absolute
-impunity, and into the yawning cavity she would open to his teasing, he
-would thrust a chubby fist.
-
-“Oscar! Oscar! My baby, don’t,” his mother would cry. But Shiela was
-infinitely tender with him, and the two would roll on the ground in a
-tight embrace, while the child thumped a tattoo on the wolfhound’s ribs.
-
-It befell on a morning that they indulged in this frolic until both were
-in a state of unbridled excitement. Crowing with delight, the baby
-staggered to his feet and tried to butt Shiela with his head. Forgetting
-for a fraction of time how fragile was this cherished morsel of
-humanity, the wolfhound struck out joyously with her paw, bowling him
-over like a ninepin. As he went backward, the boy essayed to break his
-fall on the ground by thrusting out his left arm; it doubled under him
-and snapped at the elbow.
-
-A single wailing cry brought his father running from the smithy. Oscar
-lay white-faced, the wolfhound nosing him eagerly in an endeavor to stir
-the baby to a resumption of play. Flinging a curse at the dog, the
-blacksmith picked up his son and carried him to his mother. Ten minutes
-passed, which Shiela spent in vain efforts to ascertain what kept her
-playmate from her, and Peck emerged from the bunkhouse with a shotgun.
-The quick-sensing Shiela disappeared without further ado around a corner
-of the saddle-shed; but, as the blacksmith followed on a run,
-O’Donnell’s voice stayed him.
-
-“What’re you doing with that gun, Peck?”
-
-“Shiela done broke Oscar’s arm, and I aim to git even--that’s what.”
-
-“Don’t be a fool!” the boss cried sharply.
-
-Peck faced him, his lips twitching.
-
-“I may do more’n shoot a bitch, Steve,” he said, and his voice was calm
-now.
-
-“You don’t mean that, Peck.” The range boss continued to advance, his
-eyes on the troubled eyes of the blacksmith. “Shee-la and little Oscar
-have always been friends. Didn’t she pull him out of the creek only last
-week? She couldn’t have smashed his arm on purpose. You can’t blame a
-dog for an accident.”
-
-The blacksmith cursed Shiela to the eightieth generation; but O’Donnell
-smiled and tapped the barrel of the gun with his forefinger. There would
-be no shooting of man or dog now, he knew.
-
-“Put it away, Peck. We’ll forget all about it. I’ll ride over to Deadeye
-and bring the doctor myself.”
-
-The blacksmith wavered and obeyed.
-
-Little Oscar was soon able to toddle about, with his arm in a cast and a
-sling. But Peck’s dislike for the hound grew to hate. In the short
-winter days and long winter nights he watched and brooded, waiting for
-an opportunity to make her suffer. His hostility to the soft-eyed,
-affectionate Shiela took the form of an intense nervous sensibility to
-her every movement--one sees precisely the same symptoms in persons who
-are unhappily cooped up for any length of time. Soon the bigness of the
-animal grated on his nerves, so that whatever she did excited in him
-childish spleen. Even when Shiela ate, Peck could not look at her
-magnificent satisfaction without falling into a paroxysm of loathing.
-
-Once he spread pieces of meat cunningly about the saddle-shed where she
-was wont to loll while the child slept in the afternoons. Shiela espied
-and swallowed these tidbits with much relish, and stalked away to get a
-drink, feeling unaccountably thirsty. There was no water in the trough;
-and that saved her life. Soon a tremor came upon the wolfhound, so that
-she swayed uncertainly, her nose close to the ground, froth slathering
-her muzzle.
-
-At this moment Oscar rocketed from the bunkhouse at his usual ungainly
-gallop. The boy knew exactly what to do. Had he not endured agony, too?
-There was only one sure remedy for belly-pains, and it stood on a shelf
-in the kitchen--he never passed the shelf without a certain creeping of
-the flesh. How he forced castor oil upon the dog is one of those modern
-miracles that are wrought for babes and the inebriated. At any rate,
-with only one arm free, he administered a glorious dose, and, feeling
-full of pity for the tortures of which she mumbled so weakly, he
-followed it with generous hunks of greasy bacon purloined from the big
-brown crockery jar in the pantry. Shiela became violently ill and Oscar
-feared for her life.
-
-“Dick! Dick! She sick. Hurry, oh hurry!” Oscar ran to summon help.
-
-Shiela survived, and O’Donnell devoted the better part of a day to
-impassioned dissertations on the folly of leaving strychnine baits for
-coyotes round the saddle-shed.
-
-One evening in midwinter, the range boss, Dick, the cook, and Peck sat
-in the bunkhouse, as usual, trifling with a pile of dominos. Shiela lay
-dozing in front of the fire. The wolfhound had shown considerable
-restlessness of late and Dick had cautioned O’Donnell to chain her up.
-It came Mit’s turn to play and, as he was ponderously miring himself,
-the night silence was rent by the hunting cry of the loafer. So near was
-it, so savagely compelling, that the men sent the benches back in amaze.
-The effect on Shiela was extraordinary. She was at the door, scratching
-for her liberty, whining, turning appealing eyes to O’Donnell that he
-should open.
-
-Dick gazed at the range boss and waggled his wise bald head. “You better
-lock her up, Steve, or you’ll shore lose that ol’ dog.”
-
-She was locked in the smithy the next evening, and in the morning the
-shed was empty. O’Donnell was positive that the staple and chain on the
-door had been secure when he left her the night before; yet now the
-staple dangled free, with a splinter attached. Reflecting that the
-hound’s weight made this feat possible, he ceased to speculate; and in
-the blacksmith’s soul entered peace. Shiela had fled.
-
-The Wednesday following fell blustery, with a bullying wind, and the
-range boss sat late at his table, working over a cattle tally by the
-light of a lantern. A timid scratching on the door-sill disturbed him,
-and he listened curiously. There it was again, this time accompanied by
-a plaintive whine. He reached the handle in a stride.
-
-“Shee-la! Shee-la, old girl!” His glad cry brought Mit running. Shiela
-slunk into the room and crossed to the fire, which she sniffed
-doubtfully and then lay down in front of it. Down her throat and across
-her left shoulder burned cherry-colored slashes. She touched her tongue
-to them and began to clean her soiled coat, while O’Donnell stood
-watching, lost in wonder. The wolfhound growled as he moved, but he
-laughed affectionately and stooped to the fearfully lowered head.
-
-“So you’ve come back--like the prodigal,” he whispered. “Poor, poor
-Shee-la!”
-
-“Mit,” he bawled the next instant, “kill the spotted calf, or the fatted
-heifer, or whatever else will do. She’s hungry.”
-
-Not being conversant with the tale of the erring son, the cook roared
-back a request to Steve to have sense--didn’t he know there wasn’t a
-calf in the pen?
-
-“Bring some beef, then,” laughed the boss.
-
-The animal’s eyes followed her master furtively. He noted that
-flickering gleam with a pang--the fear and suspicion of the hunted in
-it. So much had three days with the wild linked up the slack chain of
-her blood tie. Then presently she licked his hand, and the look that
-answered his was soft and appealing as of old.
-
-“Here’s enough to choke her,” announced Mit cheerily, entering with a
-slab of beef.
-
-The hound sprang at him and the cook, taking no chances, hurled the raw
-meat into the air. She caught it as it touched the floor and tore into
-it with the desperate zest of the famished.
-
-The days drifted one into another, and the Tumbling H men rose and ate
-and slept, and rose again, which is the sum of many lives. Of work there
-could be little until the spring rains fell. Would the good days of the
-roundup never come? Oh, the sweltering hours in the saddle, and the
-bellowings of mighty herds, and the choking dust of the corrals in
-branding!
-
-Shiela was carefully guarded. In the first of the mild weather she
-contributed to the bustling cheer of the bunkhouse a litter of four
-lusty pups. It was as much as a man’s life was worth to go nearer than
-six feet to the tugging little rascals; but the boy Oscar, who did not
-know this, proceeded calmly to inspect and caress them. The mother
-flared in a sudden, quaping rage, but instantly sank back and became
-reconciled to the extent of permitting the baby, quite undaunted by his
-first reception, to stroke her progeny with his pudgy hands. She watched
-him jealously.
-
-Summer rushed upon the land, and the Tumbling H outfit got to horse and
-rode forth. In November O’Donnell shipped seven thousand head of steers
-to help stay the world’s maw, and in December there were four men
-playing at cards again in the bunkhouse.
-
-“Steve,”--the cook cleared his throat as he riffled the cards,--“is it
-my deal? Shore. Say, Steve, one of Shiela’s pups is killing chickens.
-He’d ’a got a turkey too, only I done seen him.”
-
-“You ought for to have killed ’em all when they were teeny pups, Steve,”
-broke in the blacksmith. “What was the use of keeping two? Anyone kin
-see they’re more wolf than dog.”
-
-“It’s your play,” the boss said evenly.
-
-Shiela had the run of quarters, but her broad-jowled, heavy-shouldered
-pups were chained in the smithy. Just what to do with them was a
-problem. Shiela had exhibited no special affection since they were
-weaned, and it needed only the merest glance to detect the bar sinister.
-Had only the eyes been visible, there was that in their glint which
-betrayed the wolf. Yet, in the tawny coats and a certain lithe spring in
-gathering for a stride, the youngsters favored their mother.
-
-A loafer wolf made a foray from the cañon on a Sunday night, when the
-range boss and Mit played seven-up and the blacksmith poisoned life with
-a concertina. He killed a milch-pen calf close to headquarters; yet so
-silent was the raid that the men heard nothing of it, though Shiela
-cried protests to be gone and growled at intervals. In the smithy the
-pups bayed deep-voiced greetings. They leaped and snapped their teeth,
-and gnawed and raved to be free. Forgetting that O’Donnell had unchained
-them, Dick went to the door to still the brutes. They hurled themselves
-over him.
-
-“Here’s where the trouble starts, Shee-la,” observed her master
-dubiously. She wagged her tail and looked up at him in curiosity, for
-she had practically forgotten the pups.
-
-It was a bitter winter, and the cattle sickened and died in hundreds.
-The men rode range in all weathers, setting out oil-cake and salt; but
-what help could be given to thirty thousand head? Carrion waxed fat. And
-then, one day in Deadeye, whither he had journeyed for supplies at the
-first hint of spring, the range boss stumbled on a strange tale. The
-wolves were out, bolder and stronger than they had been in a generation.
-They were making no stealthy, lone hunts,--a swift leap from the dark
-upon a helpless thing, and then the gorge,--but waged an almost
-systematic war of pillage. The leader was a shaggy veteran of speckled
-gray that ran with a limp; and with him--the men of Deadeye hoped they
-might perish horribly were this not so--with him there ran two
-fawn-colored wolves like no lobo of the west country. They were,
-perhaps, slightly shorter than a cowhorse; that is, of course, a strong
-roping horse, not a stunted pony.
-
-“Shee-la, you’ve surely done it now,” O’Donnell told her with a sigh.
-She thrust her moist muzzle into his hand to be petted.
-
-In less than seven days’ time Padden reported from a division camp that
-he had come on the carcass of a freshly killed heifer near a salt
-trough. The wolves had hamstrung the poor brute and had fallen to their
-grim feast before life was extinct, he thought; which is not unusual.
-O’Donnell vowed a war of extermination.
-
-The mail-carrier came upon the pack casting about beside the trail, at
-fault in running an antelope. They let him approach within two hundred
-yards, gazing insolently, then flitted swiftly through a jungle of
-mesquite trees. His story was that beside the wily gray scoundrel that
-led, raced two tall creatures, half wolf, half dog, which ran with a
-long, springy stride foreign to lobo locomotion.
-
-“It’s Shiela’s pups,” the blacksmith exclaimed venomously, when the
-mail-carrier related this experience at dinner.
-
-“Yes, they’re Shee-la’s pups,” O’Donnell admitted; and, “Poor Shee-la!”
-he said. Then raising his voice with decision:
-
-“Johnson, you tell them in Deadeye that I’ll give fifty dollars each for
-those pups, and fifty for the old gray fellow. Put up a notice in the
-post-office. Or--wait, I’ll write one for you.”
-
-The result of this placard was an egress from Deadeye of eight ambitious
-hunters, who went their several ways, wishful to earn two months’ pay by
-a lucky shot. They straggled back empty-handed at the end of a week.
-While they were thus engaged, the pack ranged wide. They killed at Cedar
-Creek, but were compelled to abandon their prey, and slew again before
-daylight on a nester’s place on the outskirts of Deadeye. Here, too,
-they let the life out of an interfering collie. Long immunity had made
-them contemptuous--or was it that they gave ear to the counsels of
-man-raised mates? They raided the Tumbling H headquarters in quest of
-certain turkeys that were Mit’s solace in dark days, and from ambuscade
-the cook slew his finest gobbler with buckshot, in a berserker effort to
-shoot one lissome marauder.
-
-Shiela and Friday led uneventful lives amid all this harrying and
-turmoil of pursuit. They frisked and wrestled on the baked, cracked
-ground, or basked in the sun until it grew too hot and the flies became
-unbearable in attack, when they would slouch to the cool of the long
-bunk-room. Shiela had forgotten all about her degenerate offspring, and
-held herself fearlessly and with pride as an honest dog.
-
-More than once she and the terrier took jaunts over the low hills toward
-the cañon, in spite of the watch on her goings-out. It might be a rabbit
-they pursued, or the zigzagging trail of a coyote; or it might be that
-rare scent, the antelope’s. One afternoon they disported themselves,
-chasing some half-wild hogs that roamed the range.
-
-A long-snouted porker of tender years was rooting about a patch of
-bear-grass, when suddenly he cocked his impudent nose and appeared to
-listen intently. Shiela and Friday stopped short in a game of tag, to
-watch. The pig did not turn his head, but continued to stand at
-attention, his ears twitching. What could it mean? Shiela crept closer.
-With a speed that left her dumbfounded, the pig sprang sidewise on to a
-spot his glance had certainly not been regarding, and simultaneously
-tore with his jaws at a writhing, earth-colored coil. Shiela drew off
-respectfully and in trepidation, while he devoured his victim with
-beautiful hog voracity. It was the dreaded rattler, which he had killed
-with two lightning strokes of forefeet and jaws.
-
-So the days passed.
-
-In the meantime, O’Donnell had other things than Shiela or wolves to
-think about. The manager had resigned, and the boss added to the
-superintendence of the active work of the range, the conduct of the
-business of the Tumbling H company, the sale and the shipping of
-Tumbling H cattle. He was an enthusiast on improving the breed of his
-cattle and horses; and his anger was deep, therefore, when late in the
-autumn his men found the remains of a young stallion. He was a splendid
-beast, but newly come from Kentucky, and ignorant of perils and the
-necessity for perpetual vigilance. Apparently he had been cut out from
-the band he lorded it over,--sheer foolhardiness, this--and, alone in
-the battle against heavy odds, had been pulled down. That he died full
-of fight was sufficiently evident: the battered body of an exceptionally
-large young wolf lay on the ground beside his own.
-
-Shiela sniffed at the carcass of this creature, then moved away
-unconcernedly, circling for another scent; but the hide caught
-O’Donnell’s gaze and held it. The coat was of a peculiar tawny hue,
-running in spots to red. There was something in the lines of the body
-and legs that struck a reminiscent chord in his memory. He glanced from
-it to Shiela, turning the body over with his foot.
-
-“If that isn’t one of your litter, old girl, I’m much mistaken,” he
-said.
-
-Shiela, then, must atone. With all the dogs of Deadeye to help, she
-should hunt these bold ravagers. Hers was the crime; hers must be the
-expiation, even at the cost of life.
-
-“Well, old girl,” he said, as he ambled away from headquarters three
-days later, with Shiela beside him, “here’s your one chance to wipe out
-your little slip. A lot of us humans don’t get that, my lady. So go to
-it and clear your name, Shee-la.”
-
-There were twenty-five dogs on hand at the rendezvous, about thirteen
-more than were needed, and they ranged from bloodhounds and greyhounds
-to a wheezy water-spaniel, which thought he knew a scent when he struck
-it, and whose master fondled the same delusion of him. His presence led
-to a dispute at the outset, because the spaniel persisted in messing
-about and mugging a trail, and his owner pig-headedly abetted him. The
-owner was set in argument, and carried a long, smooth-bore rifle.
-However, both were persuaded to go home, quite convinced that spiteful
-jealousy was at the bottom of this attitude.
-
-“So that’s Shiela?” queried a Gourd puncher. “I reckon you ought to kill
-her, O’Donnell. It’s her pup and his father what’s raising all the hell.
-She might run away ag’in and--”
-
-“She’s my dog, Joe,” the boss cut in.
-
-Hard upon his words, old Rags gave tongue and went away on a warm scent.
-Luck was with the hunters. Within two miles the dogs were running free,
-their noses in the air, making the ridges ring to their eager yelping;
-and a wolf, a tawny, limber-limbed wolf, smashed through a tangle of
-weeds and briars at the head of a gulch and streaked across the open
-country. The pack laid themselves out in pursuit, Shiela and the
-greyhounds running silently.
-
-The wolfhound was well up with the leaders. A dozen strides would have
-brought the quarry to bay, when a speckled gray shape burst into view
-beneath her feet and departed at a tangent to her line of running,
-heading for a shallow draw. Shiela and one greyhound swerved and dashed
-after him. The others of the pack kept on behind the flagging fugitive.
-
-Everything was against the gray. He was old, and the combats and the
-hunts of years had stiffened his muscles. He was full fed and heavy;
-slumbering, he had blundered into the chase when he could have lain low.
-The two silent things behind carried in their sinewy bodies the speed
-and stamina of generations of dogs whose special business in life it had
-been to run. A wall of earth faced them, the bank of a dried stream, and
-he must scale it in his flight. Well he knew that the race was over. He
-must fight, and as well here as elsewhere. When it comes to the last
-test of courage, the king of wolves is indeed a king.
-
-A rapid glance over his shoulder showed him the greyhound almost at his
-flank. He reached the bank by a desperate spurt, whirled, and with one
-rending stroke, cast back the first pursuer, coughing in the throes of
-death. But the shock of the charge shook him for an instant and in that
-fraction of time he was unprepared to withstand the crushing velocity of
-Shiela’s onslaught. On his hind legs, his worn fangs gleaming, he
-received her. She went straight for his throat, and the grip being an
-eminently satisfactory one, she did not release it.
-
-[Illustration: “_On his hind legs, his worn fangs gleaming, he received
-her_”]
-
-To and fro the big gray dragged her, over and over, tearing with his
-forefeet to pry her off, snapping his wide jaws in futile efforts to
-seize his enemy. His hind claws ripped unavailingly along the
-wolfhound’s sides; he writhed and twisted to gain an inch of freedom for
-his head--only an inch, and he could reach her shoulder. Once only
-Shiela growled, a deep, rumbling note of content. She knew what she had
-to do, and she felt this to be the right way. Slowly her jaws tightened
-and she hung to him soundlessly. The rasping snarls grew fainter; the
-tremendous heavings and lurchings slackened. The old lord of the cañon
-had made his last fight.
-
-It was O’Donnell who drove her off. Blown but triumphant, he raced from
-the slaughter of the first quarry, and gave a long whistle of
-incredulity at sight of the slain.
-
-“Father and son--father and son in one day,” he exclaimed. Then, “Poor
-Shee-la.”
-
-As they trotted cheerily homeward, the wolfhound kept close to
-O’Donnell’s horse, and whenever she glanced up at him, frisking clumsily
-the while, he grinned down at her.
-
-“You’ve wiped out your fault, Shee-la. You’ve done more than most,” he
-observed seriously, as they neared the ranch. “I thought once I’d have
-to send you away. Or--or send you out on the long trail.” Shiela leaped
-playfully at his horse’s bridle. “But we’ll stick together. Only,” he
-drew a deep breath, “we’ll take a holiday. We’ll go back--back home to
-County Mayo, old girl.”
-
-
-
-
- VI
- MOLLY
-
-
-It may be there are persons who will scoff at the assertion that there
-is more of sentiment in a cow than in any creature of four legs that
-walks the earth. Cavilers, these--hard-shelled individuals who look at
-the gentle bovine through the eye of commercialism, not gifted to see
-beyond her barnyard activities toward the nourishment of mankind. It is
-reasonably established that one may approach a horse in comradely
-security, confident of fair play. The rules as to hybrids are these: you
-walk up to a mule in a spirit of veneration and religious preparedness,
-wearing a sickly aspect of confidence. And you quaver soothing words and
-carry a club behind your back.
-
-But toward a cow--ah, that is different. Here is a mainstay of life, a
-pillar and prop of civilization. Here is--well, a cow is a cow. Why,
-there was the time when three hundred furiously anxious, bawling mothers
-smashed out of a stout wooden corral on the Turkey Track range and laid
-a straight course across seven leagues of territory, in quest of their
-helpless progeny, mercilessly cooped in cars at a railroad siding,
-awaiting shipment to an Arizona butcher. They kept two well-grown men
-atop a water-tank for five hours, and--but to attempt a citation of
-cases would be idle. This is the simple tale of Molly.
-
-She was not an especially pretty animal, Molly--just plain cow, dun in
-color, with a Jersey strain somewhere among her remote forebears. Yet,
-one could not gaze on Molly for long without a feeling of profound
-respect pervading his soul. It was not because one could see with half
-an eye that she gave large quantities of milk; that was merely the
-performance of her natural functions. Nor was it that her wistful regard
-suggested all the sorrows of her sex. Molly in some way made a subtle
-appeal to sympathy that cannot be voiced.
-
-As a matter of fact, she ought to have been the pampered occupant of a
-clover field by day and of a stall by night. Instead, she was roaming
-the zacaton flats of the Tumbling K and losing herself among the
-blackbrush ridges, in vague wonder that the world was grown so large.
-Designed to be a respectable milch-cow on a dairy farm, here she was in
-the heart of a wilderness, and all because of a boy.
-
-He came among us, pink and white and fearfully clean; and he was the
-owner’s son. There were eleven thousand cows in our domain, but milk had
-been a thing of rumor to the outfit, perhaps because it is inconvenient
-to milk on horseback. Now, however, Vance shoved his legs under the
-boards at the bunk-house and objected to clear, biting coffee. So, when
-he departed blacker than a Mexican, with a two months’ beard and
-overalls sustained by a strand of rope,--babbling wild things of a bath
-he would take, a bath that would endure for a day and a night,--we still
-had Molly.
-
-“That cow’s got a mind, I tell you,” Uncle Henry assured the outfit at
-supper. “She’s got a mind jist like you or me, Dave, only better than
-yourn. Pass them frijoles.”
-
-Perhaps Molly did have a mind. At any rate, she was humanly lonesome. To
-be the only one of her kind in a tract of five thousand acres--they kept
-her in the horse pasture--was depressing to a companionable disposition.
-The bronchos on the river flats and mesquite-clothed hills were shy,
-wild creatures, subject to alarms and foolish panic. With mild wonder
-she would watch them break into a run at a sound or a strange scent.
-They were masterful, too, always driving her away from the water-holes
-and the salt until they had had their fill. Instinctively she was afraid
-when one of them approached with careless confidence that she would give
-place. Yet, though unhappy, Molly never overlooked her duty, and each
-morning and each evening she stood quiet while Uncle Henry milked her,
-occasionally rumbling a note of satisfaction or sweeping at a fly with
-cautious backward swings of her head. Uncle Henry was becoming too stiff
-for hard riding, and now spent most of his time trying to persuade
-himself and others that the odd jobs he applied himself to were of his
-own choosing.
-
-One morning Molly awoke to turmoil. Wondrous noises came to her on the
-west wind, and she arose and walked to the imprisoning fence. Truly the
-Tumbling K was become a Babel. In the wide, browned valleys, on the
-mesas, and far into the fastnesses of the Mules, bulls and cows and
-clumsy calves were on the march, with riders hanging in rear. Molly
-could hear the churning of the hosts on the round-up ground, and to her
-nostrils was wafted the taint of the dust belching heavenward in clouds.
-For the Tumbling K range was to be divided, and eight thousand head must
-be turned over to the retiring partner.
-
-Where did all the cattle come from? Molly had never dreamed there were
-such hordes of her kind in the world. Armies of them filed by in long
-lines, the cowboys on flank and in rear shouting, whistling, spurring
-into the press in their efforts to urge the herds forward. Molly stood
-at the barb-wire fence most of the day, staring at this rally of her
-species. Sometimes she bawled a troubled greeting.
-
-And the little calves! Many a toddling new-born, strayed from its mother
-and solicitous of protection, staggered out to sniff at the kindly
-disposed creature that nosed it so tenderly from the other side of a
-four-strand barrier. All night the trampling of sleepless thousands and
-the bawling of steers and worried cows came to disturb Molly’s slumbers.
-The bed-ground for the herds was not four hundred yards distant from the
-pasture fence. She could see tiny intermittent lights move slowly about
-them in a wide circle, where the men on guard smoked as they rode their
-rounds.
-
-Next day her heart was filled with forebodings and uneasiness. Hundreds
-of cattle were driven into an extensive corral within the confines of
-her pasture, and thence, in small groups, they went into a chute,
-propelled by the whoops and outcries of sundry reckless horsemen who
-crowded their rear. Molly watched and wondered. She saw these cattle
-forced singly into a narrow runway; she saw them caught fast in a
-squeezer, heard their bellows of consternation and fright; and then
-there reached her the stinging odor of burned hair, when the branding
-irons seared the flesh. Upon which Molly would flip her tail in the air
-and lope away. But she always returned; much as she feared it, she could
-not leave this anguished assemblage.
-
-It was Uncle Henry who discovered that the arrival of the herds was
-demoralizing our faithful benefactor. She no longer grazed sedately;
-even the succulent grama-grass of the creek-bottom failed to hold her,
-and she walked the barb-wire ceaselessly day and night. Her weight fell
-off in alarming fashion, and when, on the third evening, Uncle Henry
-approached with outstretched hand and honeyed speech, and the milk-pail
-cunningly concealed, she shook her big, patient head and moved off. He
-followed, and she quickened her pace.
-
-“Consarn your fat haid!” roared Uncle Henry, never a patient man. “Hold
-still or I’ll take the hide off’n you.”
-
-He tore after Molly, threatening dire visitations. Now, it takes an
-extremely clever person to circumvent a determined cow, when he is on
-foot and she has five thousand acres in which to manœuver, and Uncle
-Henry returned to headquarters, howling for somebody to lend him a horse
-and he would drag that old fool clear to Texas. We went without milk
-that night, and grumbled and swore precisely as if we had had nothing
-else all our lives.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Hi-yi! Bear down on him, cowboys. More frijoles here!”
-
-With a yell, Big John sprang to the lever of the squeezer and threw all
-his strength on it, gripping a plunging steer about the middle as he
-strove to win through the chute.
-
-“Hot iron! Hot iron!” the wagon boss shrieked. “Somebody build that fire
-up. All right. That’s got him, Cas.”
-
-Molly hung about near the corral, gazing on these frenzied activities in
-consternation. It was early morning and low-hanging mists were shredding
-before the sun.
-
-Some calves passed through the chute by inadvertence. Being too small
-for the squeezer to hold, they were noosed as they came out, and branded
-on the ground. One was so tiny that the men at work beside the runway,
-idly rolling cigarettes during a halt in the operations, failed
-altogether to perceive him above the heavy lower boarding. As a result,
-he sauntered into the open, and there was no noose ready to snare. His
-ears were twitching with curiosity, and he moved his legs as if they
-were stiff and his feet hurt, as indeed they did, because he had come
-many weary miles and he was not three days old.
-
-“Hi-yi! There goes a calf!” yelled the punchers. “Go to him, John. He’s
-just your size.”
-
-Big John grinned, spat on his hands, and made a dive for the fugitive.
-“The li’l’ rascal,” he chuckled, grabbing for its tail. Instead of
-taking to the open and falling a prey to a roper, the calf lunged
-sideways and went under the horse-pasture fence. He was so short that he
-easily bowed his back and slid beneath the wire. The outfit sent up a
-shout of laughter, and exhorted John to stay with him; but the giant
-remained where he was, gazing fixedly at the fugitive. Molly was on the
-other side of the fence.
-
-To her side the white-face bolted, confident of sanctuary. For a cow,
-Molly was terribly agitated. She turned about and about, trying to
-obtain a really good look at this forward baby who greeted her as his
-mother. The calf, on his part, kept close in an endeavor to secure his
-supper, being very hungry and properly careless as to where he got it.
-Molly smelled and sniffed at him, and edged off in intense nervousness.
-Evidently quite positive in his own mind that he had found what he had
-been seeking, the calf gave over all useless fuss and set himself
-resolutely to obtain a meal.
-
-“Let him go, John,” the boss called. “We lost his mother over on the
-Magayan. Molly’ll look after him. Look out! Bear down on him, cowboys!
-It’s that big ol’ bull.”
-
-Molly was thrilling to long-pent yearnings, and the vapors of
-self-delusion welled up to befog her instincts. After five minutes of
-nosing, the Jersey came to the conclusion that this must be her son, and
-yielded to his hungry importunities. With a deep murmur of content, she
-walked away, followed by her adopted baby. And behind a sage-brush, safe
-from interference, she fed him. The outfit watched them go in amazement,
-prophesying many things.
-
-One of the few things they did not foretell came to pass next morning.
-Molly had hidden the calf behind some soapweed while she went to graze a
-few rods off, and, the dawn being still gray and the air stinging cold,
-we picked that particular bunch of weed for a bonfire to provide warmth
-while the wrangler was bringing up the horses. When the match flared,
-the calf on the other side of the shooting sparks staggered to his feet.
-
-Ba-a-a-a-aw!
-
-“It’s the little ’un,” John whooped.
-
-He said no more, because at that moment came the dull pounding of hoofs
-on grass, and there was Molly, her head held high, turning her gaze
-jerkily from one to another, after the manner of cows when preparing to
-charge. We forgot about the fire for the moment and headed for the
-corral fence, streaming across country twenty strong, with Molly in hot
-pursuit. Big John eluded her by dodging dexterously behind a bush,
-leaving a portion of his overalls with the cow, and she abandoned the
-chase at once, returning to her charge. Him she licked and caressed with
-many mumbled endearments, making sure that he was unhurt. The calf took
-all this stoically and as a matter of course, considering it his due,
-and fell to breakfast. Molly gazed across at her late friends sitting
-spectrally astride the fence, and all the anger was gone from her eyes.
-They were large and melting with tenderness.
-
-A crippled horse was shot that day,--the broncho-buster threw him too
-hard, breaking a leg,--and to the carcass a coyote skulked when night
-shut down. About eleven o’clock Molly got to her knees, in which
-position she remained a few seconds, meditating; then rose to walk
-about, nibbling at the grass. All cattle get up in this manner between
-eleven o’clock and midnight to graze for a few minutes and then lie down
-on the other side. This may be the basis of an old superstition that
-“good cows say their prayers.”
-
-Molly, with the warmth of the snuggling calf still on her side, wandered
-farther than she intended. Abruptly she thrust her nose into the wind
-and sniffed. It was a stale, penetrating stench, and inherited knowledge
-warned her there was danger. Back ran Molly in a tremor of anxiety, her
-head wagging from side to side in her efforts to glimpse the marauder.
-Behind a clump of bear-grass crouched a coyote, his foxlike nose pointed
-toward the spot where snoozed her unprotected son. Inch by inch he slunk
-forward; now his muscles grew taut for the leap.
-
-Whoo-oo-oo-huh! snorted Molly, smashing down upon him.
-
-The wolf straightened and wheeled with a flash of gray, and sprang, all
-in one movement. So marvelously quick was he that escape would have been
-certain ninety-nine times in a hundred. A bull would have borne down on
-him with lowered head and eyes shut, like a runaway freight train; a cow
-charges with eyes open, and Molly, consumed with mother-wrath, ripped
-sideways with her sharp horns as the hunter swerved. A shapeless bundle
-of brown-gray fur was tossed into the air, and when it struck the ground
-and rebounded, Molly went at it again. This time she caught him full
-with her horns, and, quite by chance, followed stumblingly on his ribs
-with her forefeet. The coyote squirmed away from this terrible avenger,
-snapping futilely at her muzzle, and a cry from the calf distracted the
-Jersey from a burning desire to complete the good work. When she
-abandoned him to run to her adopted son, the wolf made as if to flee;
-but he was hurt unto death, and sank down miserably under a mesquite,
-his glinting eyes searching the brush for foes. And through the long
-night he panted out his life, until at dawn the last spark flickered.
-
-“It’s a big ol’ ki-yote”--John stirred the carcass with his boot--“A
-bull done ripped him.”
-
-“There aren’t any bulls in the horse pasture,” the boss retorted. “Only
-Molly.”
-
-By one impulse the outfit turned in their saddles to look for her. There
-stood the Jersey a hundred paces off, feeding tranquilly on mesquite
-pods. Toddling at her heels was a red, white-faced calf of sturdy frame
-and curly coat. Molly was behaving as if she had never done anything
-more exciting in her life than eat bran mash.
-
-“Good ol’ Molly,” they called back, as they rode to the bunk-house for
-dinner. Molly, hearing the familiar name, lifted her head to regard the
-cavalcade soberly.
-
-We went without milk cheerfully enough now and speculated at every meal
-as to the probable course Molly would pursue as the calf grew. There was
-little else to talk about. Some vowed she would get over her
-hallucination quickly and abandon the youngster. Uncle Henry thought
-differently.
-
-“She’s a better mother to him than his own would have been. I never done
-saw a range cow look after her calf like Molly does that rascal. And
-ain’t he fat!” he exclaimed.
-
-The wagon boss conceived it to be in the line of his duty to brand the
-calf. A man was despatched to rope him. He returned presently to say
-that Molly would not permit him to get near. “She went on the peck and
-gored my horse.” He exhibited a red wale along his mount’s flank.
-
-“You can’t rope a calf away from its mother?” the boss exclaimed,
-dumbfounded. “Pshaw! You’d better go back to cotton-pickin’, Cas.”
-
-He spurred away to bring in the culprit himself. What were cowboys
-coming to nowadays? He would show them! We mounted the corral fence the
-better to view proceedings, and waxed merry of spirit when Molly chased
-the boss six separate times. Molly would not be frightened or enticed
-away from her son, but turned to confront this unexpected enemy when he
-galloped at her. As for the calf, he glued himself to Molly’s side and
-would not budge therefrom.
-
-“Will we stretch her out, Pink?” we shouted.
-
-“No,” the boss roared.
-
-He made another try and almost got his rope over the calf; but the
-Jersey went at him just then and gave him something else to do. So the
-boss ambled back, grinning sheepishly behind his sandy mustache.
-
-“I reckon”--he cleared his throat--“I reckon that’s one on me, boys. Let
-him go just now. We’ll get him in the spring.”
-
-Uncle Henry was the only human being that the Jersey would permit within
-five yards of her baby. He entertained a sort of proprietary affection
-for the cow, and she reciprocated save when such cordial relationship
-clashed with her love for the adopted one. At such moments Uncle Henry
-was not to be considered, of course, and she was as ready to put him on
-the fence or speed him round a bush as any other member of the Tumbling
-K outfit.
-
-Upon a day in September, he was on his way back from patching the line
-fence, when he espied Molly trotting distractedly about a narrow draw.
-She stopped to stare as he approached, then resumed her agitated run.
-From time to time she dashed to the brink of an arroyo to gaze down.
-Uncle Henry watched her, surmising from the stores of his experience
-what had happened.
-
-“She’ll jist about go on the prod and rip me if I try to git him out.”
-
-Molly took a few steps toward him, lowed pitifully, and returned to look
-down at the unfortunate calf. He advanced with caution, anticipating a
-rush; but Molly only lowed again and made way for him.
-
-“I swan, she wants me to pull him out,” said Uncle Henry in a reverent
-tone. “If that don’t beat every--”
-
-He alighted and walked to the arroyo’s rim. Ten feet below, on the sandy
-bottom of a hole whose precipitous sides prevented him climbing out, lay
-the white-face. Uncle Henry deftly dropped a noose over its head, and
-dragged the kicking youngster to safety. When he went to remove the
-rope, Molly suffered him to handle her son, though she glared in swift
-suspicion when Uncle Henry threw him to the ground and knelt on his body
-to free the loop from his neck.
-
-“Boys,” said the boss at supper one night, “Molly has got to go.”
-
-“Oh-ho! Ho, indeed!” Uncle Henry retorted with fine sarcasm. “Oh, yes,”
-he added, unable to think of anything better to say.
-
-The boss shook his head sadly over the clamor that ensued. He spoke of
-the matter as a man of feeling would acquaint a wife of her husband’s
-taking-off; but it had to be. An order had come to deliver Molly to
-Bockus, the butcher at Blackwater.
-
-What! Lose Molly? The boss was locoed, or worse. Had he by any chance
-secured a bottle, of whose whereabouts we were in ignorance? We would
-buy the cow ourselves first.
-
-It was an off-day. The branding was done, and the Tumbling K outfit was
-awaiting the arrival of a purchase of four thousand steers from the
-South. Thus it came about that twelve of us rode into Blackwater, and
-Big John was spokesman. John was not much of a speaker, being given to
-profanity when a congestion of language threatened, but he had a grand
-theme, and talked about Molly in a way that made us cough.
-
-“Bless my heart,” cried the owner of the Tumbling K, when the nub of the
-matter was revealed. “Bless my heart!”
-
-He gaped, then squeezed the mighty muscles of Big John’s shoulder and
-laughed. All this fuss about a cow--one forlorn dun cow. The puncher
-grinned in his turn, shuffling his feet; for they knew and understood
-each other, these two, having been associated for eighteen years. That
-is why Bockus received the strange explanation he did when he called to
-protest against the delay in delivering Molly.
-
-“It’s just this way,” the cattleman observed, slipping an elastic band
-about his tally-book. “If I let you have that cow for thirty, I lose
-precisely nine hundred and thirty-seven dollars. No; Molly stays.”
-
-“Nine hundred and--Why, man, you’re crazy! How’s that?”
-
-“Ask those strikers of mine,” came the answer, accompanied by a chuckle.
-“Great weather, isn’t it? How is veal selling to-day?”
-
-“But look a-here, Vance, let me have the calf, anyway. You owe me that
-much,” the fat Bockus protested.
-
-“All right. Send out for him, though,” said the cattleman.
-
-It happened that Bockus despatched a youth with a pair of mules hitched
-to a wagon, for the calf. He was a wily urchin, and a glance satisfied
-him that Molly’s son could be taken from her only by craft. Accordingly
-he loafed all of one forenoon in the horse pasture with his wagon close
-at hand, and when the unsuspecting Jersey strayed off some hundreds of
-yards to secure better grazing, he made a sudden descent upon the
-white-face, locked his fingers about its nose so that the calf could not
-utter a sound, threw and tied him, then heaved the outraged victim into
-the wagon and made off. Molly returned shortly, and missing the apple of
-her eye, set out on a search of the immediate vicinity. In the distance
-a wagon raised the dust of the Blackwater trail, going rapidly. The boy
-did not feel any too secure even with a fence between them, and lashed
-his mules, shrilling oaths at the gawky beasts.
-
-The cow brought up at the fence, every sense on the alert to detect the
-presence of the calf in the fast-disappearing vehicle. Some subtle
-intuition told Molly he was there, and she retreated a few steps. Then,
-with a crash, she went through the four strands of wire, and, with a
-long gash in her left shoulder dripping blood, started after them at a
-swinging trot.
-
-Brother Ducey was conducting an open-air revival service among the
-mining population of Blackwater. He was a powerful exhorter, was the
-brother, and, as most of his congregation were women, with a sprinkling
-of men who would presently go on the night shift six hundred feet into
-the bowels of the earth, his picture of a lurid, living perdition had
-them swaying and rocking on the benches. Their groans and lamentations
-rolled up the street.
-
-“You’re all a-going to hell!” he shouted. “Your feet are on the hot
-bricks now. Hell is--” And, again-- “Hell--”
-
-Brother Ducey broke off and glared wrathfully at an imp of a boy who
-drove a clanking wagon at top speed completely around the meeting-place,
-making for the slaughter-house beyond.
-
-Then Molly arrived and took no such devious route. She went straight
-through the congregation, overturning the mourners’ bench, and, unable
-to differentiate between friends and foes, headed for the rostrum.
-Brother Ducey waved his arms wildly and squalled “Shoo!” But, as Molly
-would not “shoo,” he scaled a tree with the speed of a lizard, from
-which vantage-point he besought somebody to shoot the animal.
-
-The Jersey did not pause to trifle with these hysterical worshipers. Her
-business was to find her baby, and she was almost up with him. In truth,
-the cow was an awesome sight as she charged anew after the wagon, the
-blood trailing from her shoulder, froth flaking her muzzle. Evidently
-the butcher’s assistant found her so.
-
-“I can’t beat her to the gate!” he gasped, with a glance backward.
-
-Whereupon he wheeled again and galloped his team in front of Bockus’
-store. There he abandoned them, springing through the door just as Molly
-swept down the road. The calf bawled a greeting and the Jersey began to
-circle the wagon, occasionally prodding at the mules just to be on the
-safe side in the event of their having had anything to do with this
-theft. They kicked at her in return, but did not offer to run away.
-
-“Somebody rope her! Somebody rope her!” Bockus cried, dancing up and
-down in his shop. “No, don’t shoot. Them locoed Tumbling K’s will wipe
-out the town if you do.”
-
-Alas, there was nobody in Blackwater competent to do it. They were a
-peaceful, industrious mining folk, and a cow was a dubious thing to
-them, to be handled respectfully in the best of moods. And an enraged
-animal like Molly! Blackwater suspended business, shut up shop, and hid
-indoors or took refuge on the roof.
-
-From time to time Molly abandoned the wagon temporarily to seek revenge
-where it might be given to her. In this way she made forays over half
-the town, and put Bill Terry, the postmaster, through a new plate-glass
-window that Tom Zeigler had imported at enormous expense. Tom swore that
-Vance would have to pay for it.
-
-“Send for one of them fool cowboys!” Bockus screamed, after an hour of
-this.
-
-His boy stole forth on an emaciated pony, and, eluding the cow by a
-burst of speed, brought Blackwater’s prayerful appeal to the Tumbling K
-headquarters.
-
-We rode in and roped Molly. Then certain of us did some trafficking with
-Bockus, Big John laying down the terms, with the result that the cord
-around the calf’s legs was loosed and he was restored to his mother.
-
-All the blind savagery was departed from Molly now. She sauntered over
-to a patch of grass and began to eat, with the calf at her heels, and
-the stare she turned on the citizens of Blackwater was noncommittal,
-even kindly.
-
-Her departure took on something of the character of a pageant. Brother
-Ducey was induced to make an oration--or he could not be restrained--at
-any rate, Brother Ducey delivered a speech setting forth the
-extraordinary qualities of the cow. It was really a remarkable tribute,
-but all the notice Molly took was to flick one ear as she masticated a
-bunch of grass.
-
-“And, brethern and sisters, what does this brave creature teach us?
-Hey?” he demanded, in conclusion.
-
-“I dunno,” mumbled a gentleman at whom he was staring, in a hopeless
-tone.
-
-“I ask you-all ag’in, what she done taught us when she come a-seeking of
-her young in the very heart of our meetin’? Why, it’s plain as the mole
-on Lon Rainey’s face,” cried Brother Ducey. “I forgive her a-chasing of
-me up that cottonwood,--it’s a right good thing it was so handy,--and
-Miz Ducey kin sew the pants. But what did this noble animal show? Jist
-what I was praying of you-all to reveal, brethern and sisters. She
-showed love and devotion, and a generous sacrifice for somebody else
-besides her own self. That’s what she done showed. You-all do likewise.
-Brother Perry will now pass the hat.”
-
-We took Molly back to the Tumbling K and turned her into the horse
-pasture. She came peaceably enough, six of us acting as escort of honor.
-She is there now, followed everywhere she goes by a husky red calf with
-a white face. Molly is firmly persuaded that he is her son and the pride
-of the range.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- THE BABY AND THE PUMA
-
-
-The wagon jolted and whined over rough ground, winding among giant
-pines. Off to the right followed a tawny shape, flitting from blotch of
-shadow to screening bush, blending with the blurred outlines of tree and
-rock. The moon was hidden and Brother Schoonover drove with
-circumspection, lest his ark and all his possessions be wrecked in the
-wilderness.
-
-“Doggone that moon. It ain’t never working when you need it right bad,”
-cried Brother Schoonover, cracking his whip. “That limb was like to
-blind me. Stead-ay, Glossy. Now, girl--now.”
-
-The puma crouched flat on hearing the voice. Then the wagon drew out of
-sight beyond a tope of trees and he sprang to the shelter of a mesquite.
-There he peered again at the nester’s outfit going down the valley
-through the dark. It labored heavily; Brother Schoonover’s tones reached
-him, raised in sharp rebuke of the mare; and presently he slunk in
-pursuit.
-
-Don’t imagine that Bowallopus--such was he dubbed from that night of
-adventure--was stalking prey. Nothing was farther removed from his
-purpose. He was dreadfully afraid, but curiosity overrode fear! Time and
-again he halted to abandon the game and go about the serious things of
-life, but could not. The wagon and its inmates had him fast.
-
-Bowallopus was not even hungry, but he trailed along in rear. Perhaps
-there lurked a sneaking hope far back in that hard skull of his that
-something might transpire toward the further easement of his stomach,
-but it never for a moment dulled his caution.
-
-The nester whistled at the mare and urged her forward, and twice the
-harsh scream of the brakes stayed Bowallopus rigid in his tracks. It
-should not be held against Brother Schoonover that he forgot on three
-occasions the Biblical limitations as regards profane words, because the
-night was deceptive and he was far from water. All he had on earth was
-with him there in the wagon, and he could descry no suitable place to
-camp. The family spring-bed was slung from ropes off the floor under the
-arched canvas top, and on it his wife slept. Curled warmly in the hollow
-of her arm was the baby. Sometimes the lurchings of their home rolled
-him quite away from her side, to return him on the rebound. He slept
-placidly, being a seasoned traveler.
-
-Just before descending a gulch to cross a dried creek-bed, Brother
-Schoonover drove slap against a large rock, being now far off any
-trails. The wagon careened to the point of overturning and the baby slid
-from his mother’s arms. Mrs. Schoonover had raised the canvas for
-purposes of ventilation--she suffered from an affection of the
-lungs--and he shot downward through the hole. Being utterly helpless, he
-was unhurt. He hit the ground lightly and the wheel missed him a full
-half-inch.
-
-Of course the shock woke the baby, but he was so astonished for a minute
-that he could only hold his breath ready for what might befall. When he
-did let out a yell, the wagon was thumping over the stones, with the
-driver standing up to beat the mare, and the couple in it could not have
-heard a steam calliope ten yards off.
-
-Bowallopus vanished when the brown bundle dropped. A hundred paces and
-he halted in a thicket, arrested by a gurgling treble cry. The puma had
-seen children before, playing near the shack of a Mexican woodchopper,
-and he knew that note of distress. Very cautiously he crept back and
-began to circle.
-
- The felidae steal upon their prey noiselessly, treading on the
- soft elastic pads of the soles of the feet, without risk of
- betrayal from the rustle caused by non-retractile claws. When
- within a short distance, they crouch and spring, bounding many
- times their length upon their unsuspecting victims, which, borne
- down by the descending weight of the fierce foe, are at once
- fastened upon by the deadly grip of the well-armed jaw and by
- the united action of eighteen fully-extended piercing claws.
-
-So says an old school book--or it may be an ancient natural history--and
-it is very illuminating and authoritative. But it happens that
-Bowallopus belonged to a class of felidae which does not prey upon man
-or the children of men, and he did none of these things. He waited until
-the groaning of the wagon died away, his head up, keen for sound or
-sight of danger. A puma relies more on his ears and eyes than on his
-nose to apprise him of enemy or victim. Then he went forward stealthily,
-moving in a wide semicircle.
-
-The baby threshed about with his chubby arms and howled, whereat
-Bowallopus shrank back, hissing like an enraged gander, his tail lashing
-from side to side. Perhaps the threatening noise chilled the boy to
-silence; at any rate he broke off in his wail and lay quiet. The lion
-went nearer. He stood above the brown bundle, his muscles ready for
-combat or instant flight, and eyed it suspiciously. Much as a house cat
-would pick up a questionable bit of loot from the floor, Bowallopus
-seized the dress in his teeth and lifted the baby. Schoonover, Jr.,
-waved a pudgy hand in lively terror and slapped the beast on the nose.
-Horribly surprised, Bowallopus dropped him and sprang back. Then he
-gathered himself to leap.
-
-“Hi!” yelled Brother Schoonover.
-
-The lion snarled as he turned to flee, but the nester had stopped in his
-run and was down on one knee. Bowallopus cleared the distance between
-him and some brush with a magnificent, sinuous jump, but as he went, a
-crashing sound smote his ears and sharp burning pains ripped along loins
-and back. Brother Schoonover had loaded his old smooth-bore with
-bird-shot that day to the end that he might pot a dog-rabbit or a brace
-of wild doves for supper, and Bowallopus received the entire charge.
-
-Without paying the slightest heed to the fleeing puma, the nester threw
-down his weapon and clasped his son. Instantly the baby shrieked his
-loudest, and “God, he ain’t hurt a bit,” cried Brother Schoonover in a
-great voice. He was shaking like a cottonwood leaf and his fright
-impelled the child to further outcry, so contagious is fear. And now
-Mrs. Schoonover came running, unable to remain longer in the wagon with
-bone of her bone and flesh of her flesh lying helpless somewhere in the
-dark along the trail--she could see him dead. She prayed audibly as she
-ran.
-
-“Give him to me,” she said, snatching the baby from his sire as though
-he had been much to blame.
-
-“It weren’t my fault, Sally Jo,” he protested.
-
-“You drive most awful reckless, Brother Schoonover,” returned his wife,
-and hugged her son closer.
-
-“He ain’t hurt a mite. Just scared,” she announced, after a wondrous
-inspection by touch of hand. “Something done tore his dress.”
-
-“A big ol’ line had him, Sally Jo,” the nester exclaimed. “I swan he was
-a monster. He went a-smashing up among the bushes and rocks.”
-
-“You didn’t kill him? You done let him go and he most had eat our
-child?” shrilled Mrs. Schoonover.
-
-“I reckon I done missed, Sally Jo. There, there, girl--it’s all right
-now. You cain’t hurt a line with birdshot. It won’t even tickle him.
-This here shot would bounce off’n a kitten’s hide, this here would.”
-
-They went back to the wagon, Mrs. Schoonover carrying the baby. The
-nester opined that he had had enough of driving for one night and they
-would camp here.
-
-“It’s hard on Glossy, but I’ll go find her water first thing in the
-morning”--he poked a finger playfully among his son’s ribs--“So that ol’
-line was like to git you, boy? Ol’ Bowallopus was a-looking you over for
-a meal?”
-
-Brother Schoonover hobbled the mare and they went to rest.
-
-Bowallopus lay on a flat rock amid the lower ridges next day, sunning
-himself. He was not far from home and felt perfectly secure. In a gulch,
-washed out by floods numberless generations ago, was a large hole that
-led into a shallow cave. There was in front a sandstone ledge much to
-the beast’s liking, and here the puma resided, as a stinging odor
-proclaimed.
-
-He was very handsome, was Bowallopus. On his side, he measured eight
-feet ten inches from the tip of his nose to tip of tail, and his weight
-could not have been less than two hundred and forty pounds. Just now the
-superb richness of his reddish brown coat was marred by unsightly clots
-in the region of his rump, and he was constantly reminded thereof by a
-gnawing and itching of innumerable tiny spots. The irritation meant that
-the wounds were healing, but Bowallopus’s temper was very bad
-nevertheless. He licked his sores tenderly and settled himself to bask
-in the glare, lids drooping.
-
-Five miles away, Brother Schoonover was digging with might and main into
-the side of a low hill, for he had found a spring bubbling from the rock
-and was now engaged in fashioning a dugout for a home.
-
-Bowallopus went up the valley early that evening, being minded to kill.
-And before darkness closed down he arrived at a butte about three miles
-from his lair.
-
-The huge cat crawled warily to a ledge and composed himself to wait. At
-the other side of the butte vague figures were moving, and Bowallopus
-could hear plainly the crisp munching of grass. These were the range
-mares wearing the Anvil brand, and he had taken toll of their young many
-times before. In the position he had selected they could not wind him;
-and along the base of the butte ran a trail down which the mares went to
-drink.
-
-The sun sank back of the mountains. A big roan stallion which ruled the
-band gave over eating and lay down to roll. Invigorated by this
-exercise, he whinnied joyously and started for the pool. One mare, with
-her colt, followed at his heels. The others began to close in, slowly,
-then in groups, until they were moving in loose array towards water. The
-leader picked the butte trail, paused to pull a tempting tuft, and
-rounded a bend. Then he snorted an alarm and swerved outward.
-
-Bowallopus let him go--he was too formidable for attack--but the mare
-and her colt were below him. On the stallion’s warning he hurled himself
-downward, a yellow streak in the gloom, and bore the luckless colt to
-the ground. The crunch of its broken spine was drowned in the rumble of
-flying hoofs. Bowallopus gripped his prey by the neck and started
-homewards. Twice he was compelled to stop to obtain a fresh hold, but he
-dragged the carcass to the washout.
-
-It happened that he made a foray early one evening to Wolf Creek in
-quest of a deer.
-
-Sometimes, if he were exceedingly crafty, and wind and bough of tree
-were right, he could slay when a deer stole timidly to drink. Bowallopus
-went down the valley, alert and noiseless as was his wont. Suddenly he
-stiffened, the hairs on neck and back pringling.
-
-Here was a fence. There could be no doubt of that. It was a very crude
-contrivance of one strand of wire, but he could see the posts standing
-in a ghostly, wavering line. Bowallopus walked along it, tensely
-expectant. In the distance a tiny light shone like a fallen star, and
-Bowallopus paused often to stare. This was the lantern in Brother
-Schoonover’s house. He had fenced a quarter-section, or had enclosed it
-sufficiently to conform with the law, and now occupied a one-roomed
-dugout constructed of logs and earth. The Brother was fully determined
-to prove up on this claim, and already indulged in dreams of how the
-place would look when green under Kaffir corn, and a red-roofed house on
-the hill back of them. He had longed all his life for a house with a red
-roof, for it could be descried so far and looked so cheery.
-
-The puma made the circuit of the place and watched and listened.
-Presently the light went out and all was still. He did not tarry long,
-being seized of a feeling of unrest. All heart for the hunt was gone
-from him and he struck northward, intent on putting distance between
-himself and this newest invader of his domain. While the dark was yet
-young, he scaled a pine tree--a tree bole was to the lion as greensward
-to the antelope--and sat comfortably on a thick limb. Once he tilted his
-nose and sent his screech vibrating to the topmost hills. It was a
-rending cry like the scream of a woman in mortal pain--no animal but a
-horse in its death agony can produce a sound more terrifying. After a
-while he descended and went northward once more; but there was no
-yowling from Bowallopus now. He had to find something to eat, and
-stealth alone could accomplish that end.
-
-Yet he was back at the fence next night and on many nights succeeding.
-The dugout and its dwellers recurred again and again to tempt his
-curiosity, however far he raided. Bowallopus had no desire to forage
-there, but he simply could not keep away. And gradually the feeling of
-anxiety over their presence became a fixed dread, an obsession.
-
-Brother Schoonover acquired a dog from a passing Mexican freighter and
-owned the mongrel for exactly seven days and six nights. Most of that
-period was spent by the canine back of the shack, tied to a post. Then
-he was released and ventured too far in the dusk, and Bowallopus
-gathered him in. When the nester found the remains he forgot all about
-the spirit of kindly charity for which he had been so strong in a two
-days’ debate with Brother Ducey in Texas, and railed against all created
-things save those man had domesticated.
-
-After this episode Bowallopus absented himself from the vicinity of the
-Schoonover home for a space. He went up into the mountains, where he
-contrived to get considerable veal and young beef. Winter was coming
-upon the land and a calf did not hug his mother’s side so closely of a
-night, being grown and prideful.
-
-In the sheen of a late November gloaming, he dropped from a jutting rock
-on the rim of The Hatter and padded along a burro trail. This was the
-way down the big mountain which the woodchoppers took; thence they drove
-their patient beasts of burden seventy long miles to town. Bowallopus
-slunk beside the well-worn path, one eye cocked for trouble. He was
-ferociously hungry; his stomach clamored for food; and at sight of a
-scurrying jackrabbit, a peculiar pulsating ache started back of his
-jowl.
-
-Abruptly he drew back and flopped downward behind a thorny bush. Below,
-on the shoulder of The Hatter, clung a shack of boughs and sod. A man
-was even then hammering on its roof, while a woman passed him up bits of
-old tin. Half way between the puma and the hut, a small boy was toiling
-under a pile of fagots, tied over his back.
-
-All this Bowallopus saw, but what interested him most was an object
-nearer at hand. Not twenty feet away a Mexican baby played in the dirt,
-crowing with delight over possession of a captive lizard. The child was
-perhaps two years old and much too naked for that time of year, but she
-was hearty and cared naught for that. Her brother had brought her up the
-trail, leaving her to amuse herself as best she might whilst he gathered
-firewood. Naturally he forgot all about the toddler, the job not being
-to his liking.
-
-Bowallopus listened and watched and waited. The baby rolled in the dust.
-The man and woman were busily engaged and the boy had been sent to fetch
-a bucket of water. A bull-bat flew over the puma’s head. A hush crept
-over The Hatter.
-
-It may be that he shut his eyes when he launched himself and struck,
-though she was so very, very little. There was no cry to betray--only
-the throaty snarls of the puma, now turned mankiller and more horribly
-afraid and fearfully daring than he had ever been in his life.
-
-“A big ol’ mountain line done eat a Mexican baby up yonder,” Brother
-Schoonover reported to his wife.
-
-“You keep buckshot in that gun, Brother Schoonover; do you hear? Oh, my
-li’l’ lamb! What if that wicked lion had eat you up?” Her son did not
-appear at all disturbed by the speculation, but thumped on her breast
-with his fists.
-
-There was a tremendous to-do up and down the country for eighty leagues.
-The manager of the Anvil offered a hundred dollars reward for the
-murderer’s hide and the cowboys of the region blazed away at every
-bobcat that showed a hair within their line of vision. Even Richter’s
-sheep herders bestirred themselves to set traps, but all to no avail.
-And the victim being a native child, the killing soon ceased to be a
-live topic.
-
-The winter arrived in the wake of a norther. It blustered for a
-fortnight, then set in to be bitterly cold. Bowallopus fared well, and
-grew ever more malignant and furtive. One rib was cracked owing to
-misjudgment of distance, but accidents are likely to occur to the best
-of hunters. In diving from a tree for the back of a colt, he missed and
-came down close to the mare. In a flash he gathered himself and leaped
-again, but the mother’s heels crashed full on his side and she went away
-at full speed, her son running a good second. On another occasion a
-young bull caught him with a headlong rush, unprepared on his kill, and
-would have made short work with so excellent a start, had not Bowallopus
-sought safety in the fleetness of his legs. He was a sapient animal and
-knew when he had enough.
-
-Spring came at last, and Bowallopus had a fight. It was a family
-affair--his wife was not wholly blameless--and it is better for all
-concerned to say only that he came off the victor. A young puma had
-wandered into his ridges from the south and west, and he never went
-back. When a mountain lion does fight, it is worth going many miles to
-see.
-
-Some years it will rain so hard in this part of the cow country that the
-nesters can but sit and watch their puny efforts at raising corn seep
-away; but the cattle rejoice exceedingly. It must be admitted, however,
-that this happens extremely seldom. Generally the land bakes under
-cloudless skies from February to June and the earth opens in cracks, as
-though gasping for breath.
-
-Brother Schoonover broke his ground and planned to raise a bumper crop
-of corn, the signs being propitious. He made two trips to town, three
-days each way by wagon, in order to make all ready. Bowallopus used
-often to see him toiling long after sunset; the puma spent many hours of
-the dark in sinister vigil beyond the fence, where he could see the
-light burning steadily in the dugout. Again he would prowl completely
-around the claim, keeping always off the wire, for that solitary strand
-was associated with man. Once he topped the hill back of the home in
-late afternoon, though it was seldom he went abroad in daylight, and hid
-behind a boulder. The Schoonover baby was crawling near the door, on
-hands and knees. Bowallopus never once removed his gaze from him in a
-full hour.
-
-His own domestic affairs had progressed of late. Three sons had been
-born to his wife, who hid them on a day when she detected a certain
-glint in her lord’s eyes. Bowallopus discovered their hiding-place and
-slew the cubs and ate them.
-
-Rain should have fallen in June, but it did not. July passed, and the
-country quivered under a white ball that was the sun. The cattle gave up
-the hopeless fight. In the valley the air reeked of carcasses. Brother
-Schoonover finished a weary day in his waste fields in August, and said
-to his wife:
-
-“Well, Sally Jo, I reckon we’ll be moving agin.”
-
-“No, no; don’t say so. Have we really got to go, Jed? We’re always
-moving. This is a right cruel country, ain’t it, Jed? Nowhere for a
-person to get along nice and quiet.”
-
-He made no reply, but picked his son from the floor and set him on his
-knee. Then he stared out over his bare acres and began to laugh.
-
-“Don’t,” she entreated. “That’s awful. It ain’t so bad as that, Jed.”
-
-“We’ve done nothing but move for six years, Sally Jo. Or I reckon it’s
-nearer eight, counting them over in the Nations? And I made certain this
-place would do and we’d have a home.”
-
-“Jed,” she said, putting a hand awkwardly on his shoulder. “Can’t we
-stay? Ain’t there no way? Perhaps you could get a job somewhere--with
-the Anvil boys. Oh, anything, so’s we don’t have to move again. It’ll be
-so soon now. I’ll never live through it, I know.”
-
-He eyed her anxiously, dandling the baby the while.
-
-“That’s one of the reasons,” he said. “You ought to be near where a
-doctor can be got handy, Sally Jo. No, we’ll have to give this up. I’ll
-take you back to my folks for the winter. We ought for to be there
-anyway. The ol’ man, he’s getting feeble, and first thing we know, he’ll
-be leaving that farm to Sam instead of me, Sally Jo. Cheer up, girl;
-we’ll find another place.”
-
-“All right,” she returned hopelessly.
-
-Two nights later they made camp among giant pines in the valley. The
-mare grazed near, hobbled to prevent her straying. Brother Schoonover
-lighted the fire and his wife cooked supper of bacon and bread and
-coffee. That must suffice until they reached town--and afterwards, more
-of the same diet, for the family treasury was down to eleven dollars.
-
-They washed the pots and tin plates, and put the baby to bed in the
-wagon. Then the couple knelt down and Brother Schoonover offered up a
-prayer. He always prayed to his Maker in a loud voice before retiring,
-invoking benedictions on the entire world and all the dwellers thereon.
-Only two exceptions did he ever make and he made those
-religiously--nothing could induce him to intercede for reigning
-monarchs, and he made special mention of the Republican party only that
-they might be excluded from the general benefits to accrue.
-
-When they were rising to their feet, Sally Jo clutched her husband’s
-arm.
-
-“What’s that, Jed? There--back of them mesquite.”
-
-“I cain’t see nothing. Where?”
-
-“Don’t you see? Look along my finger. There, it’s moving again. It looks
-like a dog, Jed.”
-
-Her husband saw now and sucked in his breath. Off to the right a tawny
-shape flitted from blotch of shadow to screening bush, blending with the
-blurred outline of tree and rock.
-
-“Hush,” he cautioned, tiptoeing to the wagon.
-
-The reliable smooth-bore lay on the seat. Brother Schoonover slipped the
-shell out without a sound and put in another loaded with buckshot. That
-done, he lay down under the wagon and pretended to be asleep, but the
-gun protruded through the spokes of a wheel and the Brother occasionally
-sighted along the barrel. It was dark, but there was a pale glow from
-the stars, which would suffice for the work in hand.
-
-“When he gits in line with that pine tree,” he murmured.
-
-A mountain lion was circling the camp. He had stumbled upon the nester’s
-outfit by chance and had no business there, but curiosity beat down
-doubts and caution. He had glimpsed the baby near the fire and had
-cringed to earth momentarily. Now, he was the more eager. The sight of
-the couple on their knees and the man’s harsh tones drove him back a few
-yards, and he had inadvertently moved from shadow while one might count
-three; but now all was quiet. He lay in the gloom surveying the camp.
-The mare cropped the grass noisily on the far side and the puma
-determined to take a closer look over there.
-
-He emerged so eerily from nowhere that Brother Schoonover almost doubted
-his senses when he saw a head and neck between the sights in line with
-the tree. There was a flash and a terrific roar. Brother Schoonover was
-knocked backward by the kick of the gun, and his wife cried out. The
-baby awoke and squalled in affright.
-
-The puma made a convulsive leap high into the air, hitting out blindly
-with his mighty paws. He came down with claws tearing into the earth,
-and whirled about and crouched to meet the unseen enemy. Mrs. Schoonover
-cowered in the wagon, covering the baby’s head with her apron that he
-might not hear the uproar.
-
-“I got you, hey?” Brother Schoonover shouted, furiously elated. “Well,
-here’s another of the same kind.”
-
-He held the gun firmly against his shoulder and sent a charge straight
-between the eyes glaring at him like two living coals. The puma lurched
-forward and stretched out. He coughed once, his muscles jerking; then
-stiffened.
-
-In the morning, a mountain lion lay on the edge of camp, his hide
-riddled with shot. Still, he was very handsome. He measured eight feet
-ten inches from the tip of his nose to tip of tail, and his weight could
-not have been less than two hundred and forty pounds.
-
-While his mother prepared breakfast and his father watered and harnessed
-the mare, the Schoonover baby inspected the creature. He pulled its ears
-and kicked it with fine deliberation on the point of the nose.
-
-“Do you aim to leave it here, Brother Schoonover?” his wife asked, when
-they were ready to set forward.
-
-“Shore. The hide ain’t no good at this season. And he’s shot all to
-bits. Do you know, Sally Jo, I got a idea this is the same ol’ mountain
-line what found our son? It’s like he’s the same one that eat the pore
-li’l’ Mexican, too, don’t you reckon? Ol’ Bowallopus?”
-
-“It wouldn’t surprise me none,” she answered, and shuddered. Her husband
-spurned the carcass with his boot.
-
-They got under way. High up in the sky appeared two black specks.
-Brother Schoonover pointed to them.
-
-“They’ll rip him to pieces in no time. But we’ll keep the claws and
-whiskers and the end of his tail for the baby to play with. Hey, Sally
-Jo?”
-
-The specks grew larger. Soon they showed as birds, hovering on
-effortless wings above the camping ground. Brother Schoonover whacked
-the mare in high glee, and they set out again on their pilgrimage.
-
-Before they had gone half a mile, the buzzards shot from the blue vault
-to earth.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
- THE MANKILLER
-
-
-All this happened in the Bad Year, which was not so many months ago. The
-outfit issued daily from their camps--riding bog, skinning cattle and
-driving in the helpless to the home pastures to be fed on oil-cake and
-alfalfa. The cows were walking skeletons, wild of eye, ready to wheel in
-impotent anger on their rescuers; or sinking weakly to the ground at the
-least urging, never to rise again. Every creek was dry. Springs that
-were held eternal became slimy mudholes and a trap. A well-grown man
-could easily step across the San Pedro, oozing sluggishly past mauled
-carcasses.
-
-Wherever one rode he found bones of hapless creatures, or starved cows
-stretched flat on their sides, waiting for death to end their
-sufferings. And the flies settled in sickening, heaving clusters. Each
-mire held its victim. Wobbly-legged calves wandered over the range,
-crying for mothers that could never come. And the sun blazed down out of
-a pale sky.
-
-Even the saving mesquite in the draws and on the ridges was failing as
-sustenance; of grass there was none. The country lay bleak and gasping
-from Tombstone to the border. Not even a desert cow, accustomed to slake
-her water hunger by chewing cactus, could have long survived such
-blighting months. How we prayed for rain!
-
-Manuel Salazar gave heed to the comet where he lay on his tarp, and
-crossed himself to avert the death-curse which was come upon the land.
-This weird luminary portended dire events and Manuel began, like a
-prudent man, to take thought of his religion. There might be nothing in
-religion, as Chico contended; but a man never knows, and it is the part
-of wisdom to be on the safe side.
-
-Then, one evening, when the mountains were taking on their blue sheen
-and the beauty of these vast stretches smote one with a feeling akin to
-pain, Archie Smith rode up to headquarters and tossed a human hand on
-the porch.
-
-“Found it in the far corner of the Zacaton Bottom,” he said.
-
-Jim Floyd recognized it at once by the triangular scar on the palm. The
-hand had been gnawed off cleanly at the wrist. Floyd wrapped the
-gruesome thing in a sack, wishful to give it decent interment when
-opportunity should offer.
-
-“It’s ol’ man Greer’s,” he said. “You remember ol’ man Greer? He used to
-dig postholes for the Lazy L. Where’s the rest of him, Smith?”
-
-“I aim to go and see. Ki-yotes eat him up, don’t you reckon, Jim?”
-
-“It sure looks that way. Pore ol’ Greer--he could dig postholes right
-quick,” the boss answered.
-
-What Archie found of the digger of postholes established nothing of the
-manner of death. Both arms were gone and wolves had dragged the body;
-hence, there was no real argument against the theory that old man Greer,
-who indulged a taste for _tequila_, had sustained a fall from his horse
-and had perished miserably within sight of the ranch. Yet Archie found
-this hard to believe. Wolves do not crush in the skull of a man, and it
-was the cowboy’s conviction that anyone could fall off Hardtimes, the
-digger’s mount, twice or thrice a day with no other injury than the blow
-to his pride.
-
-Two days later Manuel Salazar brought in Greer’s horse, shockingly gaunt
-and worried, and swelled as to the head. But what interested the outfit,
-when the saddle and bridle had been removed from Hardtimes, were long,
-parallel wales along neck and flank. Archie pronounced them to be the
-marks of a horse’s teeth.
-
-“That don’t show anything. He wandered off and got into a fight with
-another horse,” Floyd asserted. “Yes, sir; it’s like that he done just
-that.”
-
-After which he dismissed the unfortunate Greer from his mind. The outfit
-shook its head and expressed sorrow for the lonely digger, but opined
-that his fate surely went to show how injurious steady application to
-_tequila_ could be, more especially in cruel weather. The Mexicans, and
-the nesters in outlying parts, were not satisfied with the explanation
-put forward. They discussed the mystery during protracted pauses in work
-and in the dark of the night. When two men met on a trail and halted to
-pass the time of day, old man Greer was the subject of talk. There were
-rumors of a snug fortune the digger had amassed and buried--sixty-six
-thousand dollars in gold, it was. Joe Toole, who made a nice,
-comfortable living by systematic theft of calves from the cattle
-company, did not hesitate to hint that Greer had died a victim to its
-professional gun-fighter for reasons best known to the rich corporation;
-but, then, Joe was prejudiced. Soon the death grew to a murder, and no
-man not of white blood would ride the Zacaton Bottom after nightfall.
-
-Tommy Floyd talked of these and other matters to his father as the boss
-was feeding Apache.
-
-“Pshaw!” Floyd said contemptuously. “Don’t you put no stock in them
-stories, Tommy, boy. Some people in this here country can smell a skunk
-when they sight a dead tree.”
-
-“But what do you guess killed him, Dad?”
-
-“I don’t know, son. I sure wish I did,” was the troubled reply.
-
-He punched Apache in the ribs to make him move over. The huge jack laid
-back his ears and his tail whisked threateningly, but he gave place with
-an awkward flop, and Floyd laughed. Others might fear Apache, but he
-knew there was not the least particle of viciousness lurking in that
-hammerlike head. Of all the ranch possessions--blooded horses,
-thoroughbred Herefords and cowponies--he liked the jack best. It
-pandered to his vanity that others should avoid the monster, or approach
-him in diffidence, with suspicion and anxiety; and, in truth, Apache’s
-appearance was sufficiently appalling. Great as was his blue-gray bulk,
-it was dwarfed by the ponderous head; his knees were large and bulbous,
-and when he opened his mouth to bray, laying bare the powerful teeth,
-Apache was a spectacle to scare the intrepid. Horses would run at sight
-of him; an entire pasture would squeal with fear and flee on his
-approach. Yet there was not a gentler animal to handle in the million
-acres of the company’s range.
-
-Toward the fag-end of a day Tommy was eating _panocha_ on the steps of
-the porch, a favorite diversion with him. While removing some particles
-thereof from his cheek, in the region of his ear, he espied his father
-riding homeward from the Zacaton Bottom. Something in the way the boss
-swayed in the saddle brought Tommy’s head up alertly. Floyd was clinging
-to the horn and the reins trailed on the ground. The boy threw his crust
-away and ran to meet him. A dozen yards from the house the horse
-stopped, as though he knew that the end of the journey had come for his
-master.
-
-“That black devil, Tommy!” his father gasped, and lurched outward and to
-the ground.
-
-Two of the boys came running and bore Floyd to his bed. That he had
-contrived to ride home filled them with wonder at his endurance and
-fortitude--nearly the whole of his right side was torn away, one arm
-swung limply, and there were ragged cuts on the head. Tommy hovered
-near, crying to him to open his eyes.
-
-The boss never regained consciousness, and died at midnight.
-
-A Mexican doctor was summoned from a border village--his American
-competitor was off in the Dragoons, assisting at an increase to the
-population. After a minute examination the man of medicine announced
-that five ribs were broken. It was his opinion that Señor Floyd had met
-with an accident, from the effects of which he had passed away. Nobody
-was inclined to dispute this finding.
-
-“Something done tromped him,” Dan Harkey asserted. “It’s like one of
-them bulls got into the Bottom and went for him when he got down to
-drink.”
-
-“No,” said Archie positively; “a bull couldn’t have tore him up that
-way. It looks to me like teeth done that.”
-
-Then Tommy awoke from the benumbed state in which he had moved since the
-tragedy and repeated his father’s dying words. They were very simple of
-interpretation. A black man had drifted into the country from eastern
-Texas, and lived, an outcast, on a place not fifteen miles from
-headquarters. It was well known that Floyd had had trouble with him,
-being possessed of an aggressive contempt for negroes, and twice had
-made threats to run the newcomer off.
-
-“A nigrah could easy have beat him up thataway,” Dan declared. “A nigrah
-could do most anything. Yes, sir; he beat him to death--that’s what he
-done. It’s like he used that old hoe of his’n.”
-
-Word of the killing flew over the land in the marvelous fashion news is
-carried in the cow-country. Within twelve hours men knew of it in the
-most remote cañons of the Huachucas, and a party of nine set forth from
-headquarters. But somebody had carried warning, for the lonely hut was
-untenanted and the door swung loose on its rawhide hinges.
-
-They buried Floyd on top of a hill where the wind had a free sweep, and
-piled a few stones atop. Tommy fashioned a cross out of two rough
-boards; and the boss sleeps there to-day. The sheriff was deeply stirred
-and had notices posted throughout the territory.
-
- $250 REWARD
-
- For the arrest, dead or alive, of the man who brutally murdered
- James Floyd, boss of the Tumbling K, sixteen miles from here,
- some time yesterday evening. This man is supposed to be a negro;
- about forty years of age; black; about six feet in height and
- weighing close to two hundred pounds. Has a razor scar above the
- left ear.
-
- He has in his possession a .35 caliber autoloading rifle, No.
- 5096, and a .32-30 pistol. He may be riding a sorrel horse with
- a roached mane, branded 93 on left hip.
-
- This crime is one of the most dastardly in the criminal annals
- of the Territory, and I earnestly urge every officer and other
- person receiving this circular to do everything in his power to
- effect the capture of this human fiend.
-
- The above reward is only a preliminary reward, which may be
- increased later to one thousand dollars, when the governor, with
- whom the matter will be taken up, is heard from.
-
- Wire me if any suspect is arrested, or if any information is
- obtained whatever concerning this negro, at my expense.
-
-[Illustration: “_The lonely hut was untenanted_”]
-
-Two months passed, and nothing was heard or seen of the black man. The
-rains held off. North and east the ranges were deluged. A blight
-appeared to have fallen upon the Tumbling K. The land grew a shade
-grayer, the dust spurts whirled in gleeful, savage dance, and the cattle
-gave up the effort of living and lay down to die. All that the boys
-could do was to distribute salt and feed and work frantically to
-maintain the water supply. The emaciated brutes would eat of the
-oil-cake and hay, and sweat profusely on the nose, then stiffen out and
-expire with a sigh. Those that clung to life carried swollen under-jaws
-from the strain of tearing at the short grass.
-
-“Poor bastard!” Archie grunted, tailing up a cow he had already helped
-to her feet three times. “It fair makes a man sick at the stummick to
-see ’em. Here, you doggone ol’ she-devil! Why don’t you try for to help
-yourself? Up you come! That’s it; try to hook me.”
-
-It was no use. He shot her where she lay, and skinned her. Then, with
-the wet hide dragging at the end of a rope and her calf thrown over the
-fork of the saddle, he set out for headquarters. The orphan was a lusty
-youngster, and Archie made him many promises, accompanied by many
-strange oaths.
-
-“Li’l’ dogy,” he said, “I’ll find a mammy for you to-night if I have to
-tie up the old milch cow. Do you think you can suck a milch cow, dogy?
-Sure you can. Man alive, feel of him kick! He’s a stout rascal. You’ll
-be a fine steer some day, dogy.”
-
-On a black-dark night flames leaped above the rim of the mountain, and
-the Tumbling K were roused from bed to go forth with wet sacks, and rage
-in their hearts, for the scum of humanity who would fire a range.
-Twenty-six hours in the saddle and six more fighting the leaping,
-treacherous enemy; then two hours of sweating sleep on saddle-blankets
-beside their hobbled horses, and back a score of miles on desperate
-trails for fresh mounts--three separate times they beat out the blaze
-with sacks and back-firing. Once more, rising heavy-lidded and dripping
-from the stupor of utter exhaustion, they saw it licking hungrily
-through the Gap. No unlucky cigarette-stub thrown amid parched grass, no
-abandoned campfire, had done this. It was the deliberate work of an
-enemy.
-
-Orders came to move the cattle down into the valley, lest they perish to
-the last horn, to the last torn hoof.
-
-“It’ll take you three days to move ’em ten miles,” the manager said;
-“but never mind. Ease ’em. Ease ’em careful. The man who yells at a cow,
-or pushes her along, gets his time right there. The only real way to
-handle cattle is to let ’em do what they want and work ’em as you can.
-Think that over, boys.”
-
-Manuel Salazar remembered this warning as he moved his tired horse at a
-snail’s pace behind a bunch of sick ones in the Zacaton Bottom. Manuel
-made twenty dollars a month with consummate ease, working only seven
-days in the week and only thirteen hours a day; and he would not throw
-his job away lightly. Therefore he permitted the gaunt cows to straggle
-as pleased them, humming to himself while they nibbled at tufts here and
-there. If one turned its head to look at him it fell from sheer
-weakness; therefore he held aloof. So the sad procession crept along.
-
-It was in Manuel’s mind to save a mile by moving the bunch through the
-horse pasture. He put them through the gate with no trouble and was
-dreamily planning how he might steal back a hair rope Chico had stolen
-from him, when the quirt slipped out of his fingers. The vaquero got
-down to pick it from the ground.
-
-“Hi! Hi!” he yelled in panic, and ducked just in time.
-
-A black shape towered above him, striking with forefeet, reaching for
-the nimble Manuel with its teeth. Its mouth yawned agape; Salazar swore
-he could have rammed a lard bucket into it. The vaquero swerved from
-under the deadly hoofs and hit out blindly with the quirt. The stallion
-screamed his rage for the first time and lunged at him, head swinging
-low, the lips flicking back from the ferocious teeth. Manuel seized a
-stone, put to his hand by the blessed saints, and hurled it with
-precision, striking the horse on the nose. Midnight blared from pain and
-shook his royal mane in fury, but the shock stayed him and Salazar
-gained his horse.
-
-“Now,” he yelled, pulling his gun and maneuvering his mount that he
-might be ready to flee, “come on, you! You want to fight? That’s music
-to me.”
-
-But Midnight did not want to fight. He had employed craft in stealing
-upon the man, and now he moved off sulkily, the whites of his eyes
-rolled back, a thin stream of blood trickling from his muzzle. Salazar
-longed to shoot holes through his shiny black hide, but contented
-himself with abuse instead. Was not the stallion worth five thousand
-dollars? Who was he--Manuel, a poor vaquero--to be considered in the
-same thought with so noble a beast?
-
-“Tommy,” he said as he unsaddled at headquarters, “I’ve found who killed
-your pore father. Yes, and old man Greer, too. Don’t look so pale,
-Tommy.”
-
-Tommy stalked into the manager’s office next forenoon, a very solemn and
-very determined, if a short and somewhat dirty figure. He was white
-under his freckles, and he talked through his teeth, jerkily, his eyes
-fixed unwaveringly on the manager’s face.
-
-“Midnight!” the manager exclaimed. “Nonsense! Why, he wouldn’t harm a
-fly. That horse would never kill a man. He’s worth five thousand
-dollars. Since we got him from Kentucky, two years ago, a woman could
-handle him, Tommy, boy. Salazar must have been teasing him. You’ll have
-to look somewhere else, Tommy.”
-
-“You mean you ain’t going to do nothing, Mr. Chalmers?” Tommy asked in a
-dry voice.
-
-“Of course not. Midnight? Impossible. Why, that horse is worth five
-thousand dollars. He couldn’t have done it.”
-
-Tommy went back home very slowly. That night he sat beside Manuel’s
-candle and cleaned and oiled a sawed-off .25-30 rifle, inherited from
-the man who slept on the hill. Salazar smoked lazily and watched him
-through drooping lids. The boy finished his task and leaned forward on
-the stool, staring at the tiny flame, the weapon across his knees.
-
-Of what avail to shoot Midnight? Of course it would be easy. Tommy had
-acquired some degree of skill by blowing the heads off chickens whenever
-any were desired for the dinner-table, and he felt assured that at two
-hundred yards he could pick off the stallion with one pressure of his
-finger. It would be mere child’s work to distinguish Midnight from the
-mares, even on the murkiest night. But, after all--had the stallion done
-the killing? He had only Manuel’s experience and suspicions to go on.
-Moreover, if he took punishment into his own hands they might throw him
-into a jail. Midnight was worth five thousand dollars: assuredly Mr.
-Chalmers would cast Tommy out into the world to shift for himself. He
-put the rifle back under his bunk.
-
-Very discreetly Tommy entered the horse pasture at sunup--he had been
-unable to sleep for scheming--and made his way down the mile-long fence
-toward the corner where the mares usually grazed at that hour. He had a
-six-shooter in his pocket for an emergency, but he hoped that he would
-not use it. Midnight sighted him and stood rigid a full minute, twenty
-paces in advance of the mares, gazing at the boy. He was a regal animal;
-Tommy thought he had never seen so glorious a horse. Then the stallion
-advanced with mincing steps, his head bobbing, the ears laid back. He
-sidled nearer, without haste, whinnying softly. The boy waited until he
-was a dozen feet distant, then threw himself flat and rolled under the
-barbed-wire fence. With a rending scream Midnight reared and plunged for
-him, his forefeet battering the ground where Tommy had fallen. He tore
-at the earth in discomfiture and wrath, and raved up and down on the
-other side of the fence, his nostrils flaring, his eyes a glare of
-demoniacal hate. Tommy surveyed him in deathly quiet.
-
-The dark came warm, with puffs of hot wind, so that the Tumbling K men
-reviled the discomfort joyously, since it presaged rain. So long as the
-cold nights endured there could be no relief. Tommy slipped from the
-bunkhouse for a breath of air, though it was past bedtime and they had
-told him to turn in.
-
-“Apache!” he called in a low tone, gliding into the stall.
-
-The jack cocked his monstrous ears and listened, knowing well the voice.
-Tommy put a halter over his head and opened the stall door. It was
-gnawed and scarred by Apache’s teeth and hoofs, and the boy wrenched it
-from the hinges and laid it aslant on the ground.
-
-“You done bust your way out, Apache,” he whispered. “You hear me, you
-ol’ devil?”
-
-He led him out into the corral and thence into the lane, talking softly
-as they went. Apache raised his nose and sniffed of the wind. When they
-reached the horse pasture the boy tore out the strands of wire at a spot
-near the corner of the fence.
-
-“You was fond of my Dad, wasn’t you, Apache?” Tommy quavered, working
-with nervous fingers to unbuckle the halter. “Then go to it.”
-
-The jack required no bidding. He wrenched free and stepped carefully
-over the wire into Midnight’s domain. Apache never did anything in
-ill-judged haste. A blur, two hundred yards off, attracted him and he
-headed toward it eagerly. A moment, and he stopped; then went forward
-with caution.
-
-Midnight had seen him coming. He trotted out from his band of mares and
-halted expectantly. Next instant he had recognized Apache for what he
-was, and shrilled a challenge. The jack brayed like a fiend and went
-forward slowly to meet him.
-
-Now, a capable jack can whip any stallion that ever breathed. It is
-really an education to watch a jack like the mighty Apache fight. There
-exists the same difference between the methods of a stallion and a jack
-as between those of a nervous amateur boxer and the seasoned champion. A
-jack has no fear that anyone can detect, and is practically insensible
-to pain. One can see at a glance what an advantage this gives him over
-an opponent with any lingering predilection for longevity.
-
-Also, a jack never fights for glory, never fights for the gallery. His
-sole object is to win. Wherefore, no idle and frivolous prancing about
-for him--no swift rush in, a blind striking with hoofs, a tearing with
-the teeth, then out again. A jack is not constructed that way. Fighting
-is a business--a serious, albeit a pleasurable, business; and he attends
-to that side of it with passionate singleness of purpose. He will watch
-his opportunity with the alert coolness of the professional, wasting not
-an ounce of energy. When the opening comes he goes to it like the stroke
-of a rattler, gets his grip and shuts his eyes and hangs on. There is
-considerable of the bulldog in a jack, and if he is to be gotten off at
-all, one must pry him off with a crowbar; in fact, next to a Shetland
-stallion, which is the darlingest little fighter that ever tore at an
-enemy’s ribs, nothing more instructive can be witnessed than a
-full-sized jack in a fair field and no interruptions.
-
-Apache had fought before--many, many times. Therefore he made for the
-foe with circumspection, his head jerking sideways, his tail tucked,
-ears laid flat on his neck, and his feet barely touching the ground, so
-lightly did his tense muscles carry him. One evil eye measured the giant
-horse with venomous composure.
-
-Vastly different was Midnight’s attack. The stallion had pluck to spare,
-but his temper was overhasty and his skill slight. Rage forever clouded
-his judgment in encounter. He had learned only one plan of battle and
-that was to rush and bear down his opponent. There was his rival. He
-would kill him. Midnight’s was a simple creed.
-
-His harsh scream rent the night silence, and the fight was on. Another
-horse would have circled so formidable an adversary in an endeavor to
-create an opening, but the black’s temper was too imperious for delay.
-Straight was his rush. He bore down on the jack at the top of his speed,
-his wonderful, supple body a-quiver with eagerness and anger.
-
-Then Apache did a remarkable thing--a thing almost human in ingenuity.
-What Apache didn’t know about fighting is best forgotten. Swerving ever
-so slightly as the black came, he lunged to meet him, crashing shoulder
-to shoulder with all the strength of his tough sinews behind the impact.
-Hit sideways, taken off his balance, the force of Midnight’s own charge
-contributed to his overthrow. Down he tumbled, scrambling with his feet
-as he fell. Before his body touched the ground, the jack whirled and
-lashed with both heels into his sides. With the same appalling speed,
-Apache drove for the throat of his prostrate enemy, secured his grip and
-shut his eyes, wrenching frenziedly from side to side and upward.
-
-It is well not to tell further what Apache did to the mankiller. A jack
-has about as much sense of mercy as he has of fear, and he has never
-been taught any rules of warfare. When he gets his enemy where his enemy
-would like to get him, he does his utmost to obliterate him from the
-face of the earth. So it was that next day the Tumbling K men were
-barely able to recognize the Kentucky stallion in the torn, broken,
-black pulp they found in the horse pasture.
-
-All night long Apache brayed and screeched. The noise of his triumph
-would set a soul to quaking. It pierced Manuel’s dreams and he muttered
-in his sleep a prayer for protection from the Evil One. The jack pranced
-around and around his victim, and up and down the pasture, wild with the
-joy of battle, magnificent in his superb strength and the pride of
-victory. Toward dawn he abandoned the carcass and drove off the
-terror-stricken mares as the just spoils of the conqueror.
-
-Big white clouds boiled up back of the mountains that afternoon, with a
-stiff wind from the southeast behind them; and at sunset the heavens
-opened of their blessed treasure. Manuel and Tommy lay in the bunkhouse
-listening to the thunder of rain on the sod roof. A burro came to the
-door and poked his patient head inside, seeking warmth and a friendly
-dry spot.
-
-“Come in!” cried Manuel cheerily. “Take a chair. Tommy, give him your
-bed. Ain’t that music, though? Hark! Oh, the cattle! Can’t you see them
-soaking in it, boy?”
-
-A yellow mongrel ousted the doubtful burro from the doorway and began
-nosing about for a place to rest his uneasy rump. The roof was leaking
-in strong, hearty streams, and Salazar sprawled on his back, letting the
-water run on to his chest. He was smiling placidly. Tommy snuggled into
-the blankets and pictured to himself a new land of much grass, and
-clear-eyed, contented cows and high-tailed calves.
-
-“The curse is lifted,” Manuel observed piously. “Yes, sir. The dear God
-sent the jack to kill that stallion. How else could it be? What do you
-think, Tommy, boy?”
-
-“I reckon so,” said Tommy.
-
-
-
-
- IX
- NEUTRIA
-
-
-My name is Neutria. It means Beaver, and they gave it me because I tuck
-my tail. Nobody but Chappo ever called me a pretty horse, but Chappo
-once said in my hearing that my ugly roan hide covered more beauty than
-all the girls of Sonora possessed; and Chappo really knew everything
-worth knowing.
-
-He was not my first master. There was another, to speak of whom is
-pain--a tall man, with only one eye, and a long, sandy mustache, stained
-of the tobacco he chewed perpetually. This person owned my mother and we
-lived in a small pasture among the lesser hills of the San José range.
-What he did to sustain life was never quite plain to us, because the
-land he held remained uncultivated and he spent much time by himself in
-his dirty shack, drinking from a demijohn which he kept hidden under
-some sacks in a corner. Oftentimes he would come from his drinking and
-drive us into a corral he had constructed of ocatilla. There he would
-beat my mother, and chase us about and about. I was very young then and
-he spared me. She was terribly afraid of him, and whenever he roared at
-her, even though it was in the sixty-acre field, where he could be
-evaded, she fell to trembling and would walk falteringly to the halter
-he held out.
-
-There were nights when he forgot us entirely and left us in a small
-wooden pen, without anything to eat or drink. Occasionally a calf was
-dragged up and shoved in with us, and it would bawl for a day and a
-night for the mother from whose side it had been torn. After a while he
-would brand the little creature with his own mark of the inverted
-pitchfork. In this manner he gathered a respectable bunch of cattle,
-though I know of two cows only which he ever bought.
-
-This is not the place to tell how he broke me to the saddle. He made me
-obey him, but he did not break my spirit, even though my sides were
-bloody from his savage anger. Although Sloan branded all else he could
-get, on me he never put the iron.
-
-“What for you haven’t got the Pitchfork on that li’l’ horse, Sloan?” a
-cowboy asked him one day at Buzzard’s Feast.
-
-“He don’t need it, this hoss don’t. He’s so doggone ornery nobody’d
-steal him,” said my master.
-
-Later I heard the other--a roaring, swaggering boy, with a kind eye and
-soothing hands--tell a friend that the only animal Sloan did not brand
-was the one which he owned legally.
-
-Whenever the strength was in me, I fought him. He was a powerful man,
-with a punishing knee-grip and a poise that was almost unshakable,
-whatever his condition. But oppression begets cunning, and ride as he
-might, there were times when I could hurl him off. If a horse take
-thought when he starts his pitch, instead of bucking in blind, raving
-anger, there is a chance that he will have the victory. I mastered a
-trick of rocketing straight into the air and whirling about back under
-the rider, before my feet touched the ground. This is difficult, but
-imparts a really terrific shock; even Sloan could not withstand it. Of
-course he would beat and spur me almost to death when he was able to
-walk again. If that method of fighting him failed, there was another,
-dangerous to horse and rider alike. I would rear high, with my head
-thrown back, whereupon Sloan would kick his feet free of the stirrups
-lest he be caught under me when I toppled. Then, before he could
-recover, my head would shoot down between my forelegs and once more I
-would go to pitching. It was very efficacious, this stratagem, and the
-pleasure of it was much enhanced if the ground was rocky or there were
-cactus and mesquite into which he could be flung.
-
-In spite of the endless cruelty to which Sloan subjected me, he taught
-me much. Whatever else he might be, he was a cowman; but he knew and
-practiced a lot that no honest cowman should know. Sometimes he would
-reverse the shoes on my feet that the impress on the ground might appear
-to be a trail leading in the opposite direction to his line of travel.
-He rode much at night, so that I became expert at picking my way down
-rock-cluttered declivities in the blackest of the dark. Once when he
-fled before a body of horsemen which had discovered three calves hogtied
-in a box cañon, I managed to distance them. Thereupon he alighted and
-muffled my hoofs with gunny-sacks, that he might follow a stony
-creek-bed without sound.
-
-“Damn, but you kin climb out when you want to,” he said grudgingly, when
-we were safe at home.
-
-Because I learned quickly and never forgot, Sloan held his hand from
-killing me in any of his outbursts of rage. At least a dozen times did
-he tie me fast to a snubbing-post and belabor my head and neck and ribs
-with a stout club, until I grew sick from pain and my glazing eyes
-warned him that he had touched the limit of my endurance. Then he would
-desist, for I was of value to him. These fits of frenzy were occasioned
-by the most trifling happenings. Perhaps when he came to drive in my
-mother and me, we did not move fast enough--she was growing very old--or
-she exhibited a too great fear. Then he would rope us and proceed to
-torture until his temper waned.
-
-I come now to the time he killed my mother and I won a brief freedom.
-The weather had been murderously hot. From January to July no drop of
-rain fell and our hills grew sullenly naked and brown. Sloan’s spring
-ceased its flow. He did not discover that for two days, being stupefied,
-and we were terribly wasted when he turned us out to find water for
-ourselves.
-
-There was no grass. The earth showed gray as the rocks and as bare, and
-the rocks gave back the heat in shimmering waves. Where the ground had
-cracked under the sun, giant fissures gaped for the feet of the unwary.
-Five miles from home we saw some cows stumbling hopelessly out of a
-cañon and learned that there, too, the water had failed. Their dried
-skins drew tight over their bones and the panic of desperation glared
-from their eyes. One prodded at my mother as we passed, refusing to give
-place as cattle do to horses, then sank weakly to the ground. Later she
-stretched out on her side, and we knew that the end was near.
-
-Turkey buzzards strutted everywhere, gorged to apathy. They would
-cluster on a carcass, unwinking and insolent, and watch us nosing in
-quest of a bite to eat. Fires had ravaged the lower ridges, and trees
-and brush were stripped clean. To remain here meant slow death, and we
-fared higher.
-
-We met with cattle on the upper slopes, spent and picking their path
-with care. A heifer slipped and rolled downward almost beneath our feet.
-There were many orphan calves, bawling impotently against echoing
-cañons’ walls, and carrion-crows hung soundlessly in flocks, their
-shadows flitting swiftly over the earth in front of us. We came on the
-body of a horse at a dried waterhole. He had plunged from a ledge in his
-exhaustion, to die helplessly in sight of the place he sought. Crows had
-torn out the eyes.
-
-But I would not let my mother become disheartened. All these creatures
-were moving downward, and some propelling force has always driven me
-upward in time of stress. So I led her far among the peaks. It was
-desolate enough, of a certainty--so barren that my poor, tottering
-mother wanted to go back, though she knew well that the homeward stretch
-was beyond her strength--but I urged her forward.
-
-We came at last to four peaks, away up in those mountains, and threading
-a defile, emerged into a cuplike draw among them; and there were
-mesquite in profusion and many green things. And more precious than all,
-a tiny spring bubbled behind a boulder at the north end. It would not
-water more than four head, but it sufficed, and we tarried on its edge
-all of one evening.
-
-For forty days we stayed in our random home and gained in flesh and in
-strength. Then, one hot, sticky evening, great banks of mist surged
-upward and massed around our beloved peaks, and the rain broke from the
-press and drenched the hills. We turned our backs to the driving
-torrents, clamped our tails and let the cool water soak into our
-crackling hides.
-
-What a difference in the land when the sun showed again, clear and warm!
-It was as a dead thing come to life. Tender shoots thrust their heads
-above the hard ground; the trees stopped their complaints, and nodded
-and rustled jauntily to a southwest breeze, for the sap stirred within
-them and soon they would put forth new leaves. A ground squirrel emerged
-from a hole, blinked impudently at us, and then dashed off across the
-rocks, reckless from sheer joy of being alive. We sniffed of the good,
-fresh wind and headed for the lower reaches, for there would be rare
-grazing now that the rains had washed the valleys. Thus we came to live
-close to our old home.
-
-Sloan came riding on an October day.
-
-“Crackee, but you two is fat,” he shouted gleefully.
-
-He had a new horse, a high, long-backed sorrel with the legs of a racer.
-I knew the breed,--a steel-dust valley horse, built for speed and
-helpless as a wagon among our crags. Sloan drove us in and got down to
-put a halter on the mare.
-
-My mother had never concealed her dread of him. It moved him always to
-an excess of fury, but she had learned terror in youth and it held her
-through all her years. Now she snorted, her limbs a-tremble, and drew
-back. The sweat stood out on her muzzle and dyed her neck.
-
-“What,” Sloan bellowed, “you ol’ she-devil, you ain’t learned to quit
-dodging yet? Then, by God, I’ll learn you.”
-
-He swung a breast-yoke with all his force, smashing my mother squarely
-between the ears. The mare gave a moan, a long sigh, and sank slowly to
-the ground, the eyelids flickering. I saw her legs stiffen.
-
-He kicked her where she lay and started for me, but I rushed by him,
-lashing with my shoeless heels as I went. They caught him full in the
-chest. I can hear yet the grunt he gave at the impact; then over he
-went.
-
-He had put up only two bars of the corral gate. I took them with a rush
-and headed for the high hills. Sloan scrambled to his feet, coughing and
-swearing, and ran to the sorrel. In the saddle, he fired twice, but
-though the bullets slashed the ground ahead of me, I never wavered. He
-let out a shout and spurred after, making ready his rope as he came. It
-made my blood dance to see these futile efforts. For a valley horse is
-to a mountain horse as a house kitten is to a wild-cat. It is true that
-an exceptional valley horse, if turned loose in the hills young enough,
-may in three years’ time develop into a fair mountain pony--with good
-schooling, that is. Even then he will lack something of our depth of
-chest and perfection of feet. But put a valley horse, green, in the
-mountains, and he will stand and shiver and sweat, not daring to
-venture. So I was elated when Sloan came pounding behind, knowing full
-well that the sorrel could never follow where I would lead.
-
-The chase led up a rocky cañon filled with post-oak, along a mesa,
-through a gap, skirted a summit, and dipped downward into another cañon.
-Now we were straightened out for my familiar peaks. Suddenly I became
-aware that the pursuers had dropped back, and, easing in my run, I saw
-Sloan beating the sorrel over the head with his rope. He was ever thus,
-blaming his mount on the least excuse.
-
-Two days and a night I fled. Of course it was necessary to pause for a
-few hours to eat grass and to drink, but fear of Sloan kept me moving. I
-struck south, then westward. Fences delayed my flight considerably in
-the valleys, but I had had experience with them, and roamed along until
-I discovered a spot where the wires were partially down and could be
-jumped, or until I found a watergap. I suppose I covered one hundred and
-sixty miles, but not all in a straight line by any means, and at sundown
-of the second day I was in a goodly range of hills. Here I rested.
-
-A band of bronchos wandered into a draw where I fed that night, and I
-joined them. We roved where we willed, and the rain fell abundantly and
-the grass was green and plentiful.
-
-Why is it one can never be entirely happy? If one be breast-high in
-succulent zacaton, a fly will mar the feast. I have observed a mare in a
-field of alfalfa, neglecting what she could have without effort, to
-stretch unavailingly through the fence after a tuft of tough
-Johnson-grass; in fact, I have done that myself. Here was I with
-millions of virgin acres in which to wander; all I could eat; agreeable
-companions. Yet I pined to hear a man’s voice. That sounds inexplicable,
-but it is the truth. Even Sloan’s harsh bass tones would have been
-welcome, after six months of freedom. Man’s companionship had been bred
-in me, and though his presence might bring terror, yet I longed for it,
-and the master-grip of his hand.
-
-Winter passed and the long, dry season opened in a blaze of heat. A
-horseman bore down on us one day, from the south, and we massed swiftly
-for escape. Within a mile, two more riders appeared, and my companions
-increased their pace to a gallop. Only I, of all the band, knew what
-this meant. The others were bronchos who had never felt the rope and
-they ran blindly, ignorant of the cordon closing in from every
-direction. But I was cleverer. Suddenly darting from the herd, I sped
-within sixty feet of a cowboy--not close enough for his loop--and gained
-the mouth of a cañon. Up this I spurted, the rider in hot chase.
-
-How often are pride and conceit confounded. The cañon narrowed--narrowed
-to sheer walls fifty feet apart--and there ahead of me, blocking my
-path, was a cliff of red-streaked rock. Water trickled down its face.
-That much I perceived, and then it rushed upon me that the race was run.
-I turned short about and tried to go by him as I had passed Sloan, but
-he threw his rope and caught me cleanly. Sloan had taught me the lesson
-of the rope--taught it in bitter vindictiveness--and I followed my
-captor without struggle.
-
-“Done got a maverick,” he announced, when he rejoined his comrades.
-
-“He’s been rode before, Chappo,” another said. “Look at the way he
-follows. And there’s been a cinch sore on his left side. Look.”
-
-“I cain’t see it,” Chappo said obstinately. “He’s a maverick, I’m
-a-telling you. And he’s my horse, because I done found him.”
-
-When he had me in the corral at headquarters, Chappo walked fearlessly
-to my head. Of course I began to quiver, for well I knew what this
-portended.
-
-“You pore son-of-a-gun,” he muttered, and stopped. “So he done beat you
-over the haid?”
-
-He scratched my ears and rubbed my head lightly between the eyes. All
-the while, he talked to me in a low tone, with a sort of laugh behind
-it. Chappo was a small man, no higher than a fence post, but there was
-something in his touch that made me fear and yet want him to keep on
-rubbing. When he attempted to put the bridle on, I stood rigid,
-expectant. Surely the beating would come now. It did not. Instead, he
-said, “You ol’ rascal, you,” and jabbed me in the ribs with his thumb.
-Now, here is a curious thing. A man can jab you with his thumb so that
-it hurts, and he can jab you in the same place with the same force and
-it will only tickle pleasantly. Everything depends on the spirit in
-which it is done. Chappo’s thumb was very agreeable and I laid back my
-ears and pretended to nip at him.
-
-“I’ll top you,” he said, “and then I’ll put the Box C on you.”
-
-It amused me vastly to hear this mite of a man tell so confidently how
-he would ride me, when even the terrible Sloan could not keep the saddle
-at times. Just to scare him, I bowed my back when he slapped the blanket
-on. Then I rolled my eyes backward to note the effect. He was grinning,
-actually grinning--and his hat did not show above my withers. Next, he
-threw on the saddle, and the curve in my spine was unmistakable; but he
-merely hummed a tune and began to cinch me tightly, with careless
-freedom, just as if we had been friends all our years. It surprised me
-so much that I suffered his impertinence in quiet.
-
-There were some cowboys on the fence, watching.
-
-“Want me to ear him, Chappo?” one asked.
-
-“No-oo. Me and him’s friends already. Ain’t we?” He made me walk a few
-steps, still grinning as he inspected the significant upward tilt of the
-saddle. “Look at his tail, boys. We’ll shore have to call him Beaver.”
-
-“Call him Neutria,” one cried.
-
-My new master nodded and then stood directly in front. I tried to look
-away, but his eyes drew mine in spite of me, and when he backed off, I
-followed, though he exerted no pressure on the bit. There was nothing
-hard and there was nothing mean in those eyes; a devil lurked in
-Sloan’s. Chappo’s were clear and very good-natured, yet oddly
-compelling.
-
-“That’s all right,” he said. “Now we know each other, me and you,
-Neutria.”
-
-He pulled my head around by the cheek of the bridle and next moment was
-atop. I remained motionless. The grip of his knees was curiously at
-variance with his bulk: somehow that grip raised a doubt in my mind that
-I could shed him.
-
-Next second I was pitching, more from force of habit than from any wish
-to hurt this youth. What was the matter? No spurs gored my sides; I felt
-no sting of quirt. Instead, Chappo merely swayed in the saddle and he
-whooped me on to further effort, hitting my shoulders gleefully with his
-hat. This was too much--a wight of one hundred and twenty pounds to make
-game of me! I paused for breath and to gather strength.
-
-“Hey, you ain’t quitting?” he inquired. “Wipe her up, li’l’ feller. Fly
-at it.”
-
-After that it was imperative I should do my best--Sloan could never have
-kept his seat when I let myself loose to his challenge. Every trick his
-brutality had taught me I employed, and only once did Chappo waver. He
-was riding on his spurs now, yet he had to grab desperately for the
-horn; but he righted himself with a laugh and renewed his yelling. At
-last I was compelled to stop.
-
-“You’re shore a dandy, Neutria,” he panted. “Let’s call it an even
-break.”
-
-That suited me admirably. It would have been a shame to injure the boy.
-
-I never pitched with Chappo again. He was always kind to me, save once
-only. That was when he placed the Box C on my left hip with a red-hot
-iron. It pained horribly, but I realized that all horses had to go
-through this ordeal and that Chappo did not mean to be brutal.
-
-What times we had that summer and autumn! It was a year of frequent
-rains, and horses and cattle were sleek and fat and rollicking. Chappo
-and I would go out from camp twice each week and prowl the mountains the
-livelong day. Perhaps a long-eared calf would be roused up--he is one
-that has escaped branding--and my master would settle himself and take
-down his rope even as I flashed in pursuit, over rocks and brush, down
-cañons’ sides, up cliffs, shooting through defiles. It is something to
-be a mountain horse, though it is I who say it; no other horse in the
-world could have carried Chappo at full speed where I carried him after
-mavericks. And he never faltered.
-
-“Wherever you put your doggone feet is good enough for me, Neutria,” he
-said once, at the bottom of a perilous descent.
-
-Chappo was an excellent cowhand, more skilled than Sloan. He would
-seldom miss a throw in the wildest country, and when he had the calf
-roped, down he would jump and hogtie it before one could count thirty.
-Then I would fall to grazing while he built a fire, heated his
-running-iron and put the company brand on the captive. There were days
-when we caught four or five in this manner. It was glorious sport.
-
-And then, of course, there was the fall roundup, when all our
-riders--twenty-two in number--swept the range in daily drives. We
-collected more than nineteen thousand head of cattle; some of the
-long-horned steers Chappo and I brought in had not set eyes on a man
-since they were suckling calves. It was good to chase these outlaws,
-they being stout and hearty on the rope, and it nerved me to see
-Chappo’s fearlessness and confidence. He would tie to one of the big
-brutes without hesitation, whatever the nature of the ground, trusting
-implicitly to me to throw it. If a steer had dragged me down, it would
-have meant maiming for Chappo and me, so I was ever on my guard. I
-always contrived to throw them, even though some weighed two hundred
-pounds heavier than I.
-
-I was Chappo’s top horse--that is to say, his best saddler. Consequently
-it was me he rode to town on the rare occasions he could get there. I
-took the best of care of him.
-
-On one occasion when he had spent an entire morning in town visiting
-various places of call with friends, Chappo bet fifty dollars I could
-throw an enormous bull they had in a feeding-pen. It was an intensely
-foolish wager; besides, he hadn’t the money, and was earning only forty
-dollars a month. The sight of this bull--a Hereford--appalled me for a
-moment, for he was a monstrous fellow, blocky and solid; but Chappo
-patted my neck and whispered to me, and when he let his noose fly, I
-darted off with taut muscles, unafraid, yet ready for the tremendous jar
-that would come with the tightened rope. What a giant he was! When he
-lunged, the girth nearly cut me in two, and for the fraction of a second
-I thought my feet would fly from under me and that Chappo would be
-ignominiously prostrated in the dust. Then, at the critical moment, we
-gave him slack, let him run to the end of it, wheeled like a striking
-snake, and with a cunning heave, flopped him ponderously on the ground.
-It broke his neck and they put Chappo in the calaboose. The boss got him
-out only after much ceremony and considerable loose talk and the payment
-of moneys.
-
-Chappo dearly loved to go to town. He was always in excellent humor on
-these trips and would attempt feats that reflected more credit on his
-stoutness of heart than on his head. On a night, he tried to make me
-climb the steps of the hotel veranda and enter the bar. Had it been
-anyone but Chappo, I would have pitched him off without more ado, such
-was the childishness of this display. But because it was Chappo and I
-could feel from his legs that all was not right with him, I meekly
-ascended the steps and walked into the bar, taking heed where I placed
-my feet. A crowd of loafers cheered me and filled a large bowl, that I
-might drink, but Chappo would have none of this.
-
-He sang much on the road back to camp. It was dark as a panther’s lair.
-Chappo would hum and drone a few lines, then relapse into abrupt
-silences. I kept every sense alert, for his safety depended on me. Once,
-when he sagged in the saddle, I stopped until he got settled again.
-After that he rode with firmer seat, but his good humor seemed to have
-vanished. We reached a point where a cow trail, a mere thread so faint
-that it was barely discernible, led off from the main trail.
-
-“Here, you,” Chappo said, jerking me about, “who’s running this show?
-Hey? Doggone your fat haid. This is a cut-off.”
-
-The trail was new to me, but I took it obediently. It led in the general
-direction of camp, but became vaguer as we proceeded. Finally it merged
-into the brown of a hillside.
-
-“Hell!” Chappo exclaimed. “Where’s that cussed trail gone to, Neutria?
-Well, let’s hit across country, boy. What’s twenty miles between two of
-us?”
-
-We struck over a hill at a trot. Suddenly my heart gave a leap and every
-hair on my body seemed to tingle. Just in time I sat back on my
-haunches. Chappo swore and struck me sharply with the spur.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, you ol’ rascal? I swan. . . . Seen a
-skunk?” he cried.
-
-I began to shiver, and that sobered him. It was too dark to make out
-anything and he lighted a match. A gulf yawned beneath us, where the
-hill dropped away to a jumble of rocks. Chappo sucked in his breath and
-let the match fall. Then he turned me around.
-
-“Neutria,” was all he said, but let his hand rest for a long minute on
-my withers.
-
-We were following the Gap trail on a day in late autumn when, in
-rounding a bend, we almost collided with a rider.
-
-“Hel-lo,” came in surprised accents. It was Sloan, on his sorrel.
-
-“Howdy,” Chappo said. “Nice and cool, ain’t it?”
-
-“Whose hoss is that?”
-
-“He’s my horse. Finest cowhorse in these here mountains.” Chappo would
-often boast thus. It was unwise, but it made me very proud nevertheless.
-
-“Huh-huh. And who might you be?”
-
-“The Emp’ror of Rooshia.”
-
-“Sure. You might be, but you ain’t. You got papers for this here hoss?”
-
-“No, I ain’t got no papers for him. Don’t you see the Box C on him?
-That’s papers enough.” Chappo was careless and bold, but I knew he was
-anxious.
-
-“You got to have papers in Mexico. That’s my hoss, son.”
-
-“Yes?” said Chappo. “Where’s your papers, then?”
-
-“I kin prove he’s mine,” Sloan said evenly. “I’ll be obliged for that
-hoss, pardner.”
-
-My master thought a moment. “What’s your name?” he asked.
-
-“Sloan.”
-
-“Yes? I’ve heard of you, Sloan. The company knows you, too. There ain’t
-no use in gitting mad. Let’s talk business.”
-
-“All right, son. But that’s my hoss and I’ll be obliged for him.”
-
-“Sloan, I’m going to tell you about Neutria here. I caught him with a
-bunch of bronchos. He was a maverick, so I done put my brand on him.
-What’ll you take for him?”
-
-“I won’t take nothing.” I recognized that surly bass growl. He had been
-drinking.
-
-“I’ll tell you what I’ll do. To save trouble, I’ll buy him off’n you. Me
-and him is friends. So I’ll give you seventy-five dollars gold for this
-here li’l’ horse. That’s a good price, Sloan. I’ll raise the money in a
-week.”
-
-“No, you won’t, young feller. You won’t give me seventy-five dollars,
-nor you won’t give me seventy-five thousand dollars. That’s my hoss. I
-won’t sell him. Him and me’s got a li’l’ account to square up, and--”
-
-“Then it’s up to you to prove he’s yours,” Chappo answered. I scarcely
-knew his voice, it had gone so hard and cold.
-
-“You don’t believe this hoss is mine?”
-
-“Not me. You rustle calves, Sloan, and--”
-
-“I love a thief,” Sloan said, “but I hate a liar.”
-
-What happened then was beyond my powers of perception. I felt Chappo
-reach to his hip. There was a flash that singed my face, and Sloan sat
-his sorrel with a smoking six-shooter in his hand. My master tumbled
-sideways, twisting the saddle as he fell, and struck the ground on his
-shoulders.
-
-“Don’t shoot, Sloan,” he begged, “I ain’t got my gun. You’ve done for me
-anyway. Don’t.”
-
-But Sloan slued his horse that he might obtain a clear shot, and pulled
-twice on him with deliberate aim.
-
-“Now,” he cried clutching my reins, “now I’ll settle with you.”
-
-I reared straight up and plunged forward at him. The headstall snapped
-and the bit dropped from my mouth. With the smack of my shod hoofs on
-his flank, the sorrel began to pitch, and Sloan dropped his gun.
-
-With that I ran--ran as I had never run before in my life. When utterly
-worn out, I slowed to a walk and endeavored to rid myself of the saddle,
-which galled me badly. For a long time it resisted every effort, but I
-did not despair. Chappo’s fall had turned it underneath my belly and
-there it was in reach of my hind feet. Before dawn I had kicked and torn
-the thing from my sides, and was free and unencumbered.
-
-Why tell of my frantic wanderings during the next two days? The spot
-where my master had fallen drew me irresistibly. I could not leave; but
-I feared Sloan more than ever and spent the hours in cautious circlings
-of the vicinity of the Gap. At last I could bear it no longer.
-
-The moon was shining as I lightly trod the Gap trail. Going warily as a
-coyote, I was brought to a standstill by a strong taint. I sniffed and
-was fearfully expectant, but still advanced. Something was swinging from
-the lowest limb of an elm. A rope creaked mournfully to the swinging. I
-snorted and made a circuit of the thing, approaching gingerly. A gust of
-wind turned the object, so that the moon lighted its every line.
-
-It was Sloan.
-
-A hundred yards beyond, I came on a small pile of rocks. They had laid
-Chappo where he fell. Above the rocks was a rude cross, fashioned of
-mesquite boughs.
-
-I am a free rover now. Sometimes I run with the wild horses. Again I go
-off for solitary pilgrimages into the mountain fastnesses.
-
-Often I steal back at night to the Gap trail. And there, beside the pile
-of stones and the cross, I whinny--whinny again. But Chappo never
-answers.
-
- THE END
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Archaic spellings and hyphenation have been retained. Inconsistencies in
-hyphenation have been retained. Obvious typesetting errors have been
-corrected without note.
-
-[End of _The Untamed_, by George Pattullo]
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Untamed, by George Pattullo
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Untamed
-
-Author: George Pattullo
-
-Illustrator: Charles Bull
- Charles Russell
- Haydon Jones
-
-Release Date: September 26, 2020 [EBook #63307]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE UNTAMED ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mardi Desjardins & the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;font-size:2em;font-weight:bold;'>The Untamed</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'><a id='front'></a></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i002.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0001' style='width:70%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'>“<span class='it'>So much had three days with the wild linked up the slack chain of her blood tie.</span>”--<span class='it'>Shiela</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-bottom:0.5em;font-size:2em;font-weight:bold;'>The Untamed</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.3em;'>Range Life in the Southwest</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>By</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.3em;font-weight:bold;'>George Pattullo</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i004.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0002' style='width:17%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Toronto</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:1.3em;'>McLeod &amp; Allen</p>
-<p class='line0'>1911</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Copyright 1908, 1909, 1910 by <span class='sc'>The Curtis Publishing Company</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>Copyright 1910 by <span class='sc'>The S. S. McClure Company</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>Copyright 1911 by <span class='sc'>The Phillips Publishing Company</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>Copyright 1911 by <span class='sc'>Desmond FitzGerald, Inc.</span></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>TO</p>
-<p class='line0'>FRANK B. MOSON</p>
-<p class='line0'>and the boys of the O R, R O, and Turkey Track</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;My coffee I boil without being ground.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The fire I kindle with chips gathered round.</p>
-<p class='line0'>My books are the brooks, my sermons the stones;</p>
-<p class='line0'>My parson’s a wolf on pulpit of bones.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The sky is my ceiling; my carpet’s the grass;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;My music’s the lowing of herds as they pass.</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;margin-top:0.5em;font-size:small;'>--<span class='it'>Ballad of The Trail Boss.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Acknowledgment is made to <span class='it'>The Saturday
-Evening Post</span>, <span class='it'>McClure’s Magazine</span>, and <span class='it'>The
-American Magazine</span> for permission to republish
-these stories.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'>CONTENTS</h1></div>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 10em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 2em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 0.5em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><span style='font-size:smaller'>PAGE</span></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>I</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Ol’ Sam</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A mule</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chI'>13</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>II</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Marauder</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A coyote</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chII'>51</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>III</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Corazón</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A roping horse</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chIII'>83</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>IV</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Outlaw</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A steer</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chIV'>112</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>V</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Shiela</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A wolfhound</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chV'>142</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>VI</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Molly</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A range cow</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chVI'>173</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>VII</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Baby and the Puma</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>Mountain lion</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chVII'>202</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>VIII</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>The Mankiller</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A jack</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chVIII'>230</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle0'>IX</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle1'><span class='sc'>Neutria</span></td><td class='tab1c3 tdStyle1'>A mountain cowhorse</td><td class='tab1c4 tdStyle2'><a href='#chIX'>257</a></td><td class='tab1c5 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div><h1>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h1></div>
-
-<table id='tab2' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 17.5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 7em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 0em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>“So much had three days with the wild linked up the slack chain of her blood tie”</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#front'><span style='font-size:smaller'><span class='it'>Frontispiece</span></span></a></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><span style='font-size:smaller'><span class='it'>Facing Page</span></span></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>“What you mean by running off this a-way?”</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#run'>48</a></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>“The wolf drove away a couple of buzzards and fell upon this savagely”</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#buzz'>60</a></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>“Leaping, with legs stiff, straight off the ground”</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#leap'>100</a></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>“On his hind legs, his worn fangs gleaming, he received her”</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#legs'>170</a></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle3'>“The lonely hut was untenanted”</td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#hut'>240</a></td><td class='tab2c3 tdStyle3'></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chI'></a>I<br/> <span class='sub-head'>OL’ SAM</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Git your nose out’n that pot. Hi,
-you flop-eared--I swan, that ol’
-mule makes me mad sometimes.
-He’d jist as leave snake your whole batch right
-from under your nose as look at you. Git,
-you long-legged rascal! Whoopee!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cook dashed at the offender, swinging
-a bit of firewood. It struck the hybrid upon
-the hindquarter and he countered instantaneously
-by lashing out with his heels. Then he
-turned to smell of the projectile, but finding
-it unfit for consumption, trotted off up a
-neighboring rise and presently disappeared
-from view.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Certain coarse men of the Lazy L outfit
-called him Hell-on-Wheels, among other
-things, but his real name was Sam, and he
-made one of the four-mule team that hauled
-the chuck-wagon during round-up. Between
-him and Dave was a personal feud; they were
-most loving enemies. In the beginning the
-cook had pampered him by feeding bread to
-the big creature, taking no heed, and now this
-artificial appetite he had created made of
-Dave’s waking hours a perpetual vigil and
-conjured up nightmares in place of refreshing
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For whenever Sam wasn’t doing the major
-share of hauling some four thousand odd
-pounds of wagon, bedding and provisions
-from one round-up ground to another, he was
-loafing on the confines of camp, awaiting a
-favorable opportunity to go in surreptitiously
-and nose among the pots or at the back of the
-wagon for the buns Dave made so cunningly.
-What time he lost this way from grazing he
-made up easily by his pillage; bread is very
-fattening, and then, of course, the chuck-wagon
-team received regular rations of corn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet Dave was a watchful scoundrel, and
-day by day it was being borne in upon Sam
-that in these attempts at pilfering he received
-blows and abuse more often than huns. But
-at night, when the punchers lay asleep on the
-ground and he could hear the cook slumbering
-stertorously beneath the wagon-fly, it was different:
-then Sam would wander into camp
-and make his way on soundless feet to the
-dead fire. Beside its ashes he knew there
-would be scraps of bread, perhaps some of
-them sweetened with molasses, and for these
-his whole being craved. On one such excursion,
-as he munched happily on a wet crust, he inadvertently
-put his foot into Dave’s face, and,
-because Hell-on-Wheels weighed about thirteen
-hundred pounds, the cook awoke very
-peevish.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If it wasn’t,” he remarked next morning
-as he hitched up--“if it wasn’t that you could
-haul more’n them other three put together, I’d
-skin you alive. Oh, you needn’t go for to pretend
-you didn’t do it a-purpose. You seen me
-there, all right. Look at that lip! Don’t it
-look as if I’d fell off’n a mountain?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cook always knew what to expect of
-Sam. When putting the mules in the wagon
-he was cognizant of the precise moment that
-Sam would kick, and could judge to a hair’s
-breadth at what angle the smashing blow
-would be delivered. On his part, Sam knew
-that the cook was prepared; otherwise it is
-doubtful whether he would have let go some of
-the vicious side-sweeps of his left leg that he
-did. On occasions when the attacks were especially
-wicked, or when Dave calculated the
-margin of safety with too fine nicety, he would
-possess himself of a stout club and hammer
-Hell-on-Wheels until he was weak. In this
-way were bred mutual respect and a thorough
-understanding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was when the wagon was miring down,
-or when they were climbing a rocky trail in the
-mountains, that Sam and the cook gloried one
-in the other. Once Dave’s judgment went
-wrong by three inches in fording a stream--he
-may have been careless with a splendid contempt,
-as was his habit--and one hind wheel
-sank oozily into quicksand. The cook stood
-up and whirled his long whip and adjured
-his team by all that was holy to pull, pull,
-pull.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now, you, Hell-on-Wheels! Good ol’
-boy! You, Sam! You!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He lashed three of the team with stinging
-force, but Sam he did not touch. The great
-mule laid his shoulders into the collar and
-heaved,--heaved again--and with a wrench and
-a sucking sound they floundered out to hard
-sand, to safety. Whenever Sam came to a
-realization that the job required something
-extra, and stretched himself out accordingly,
-either the wagon followed where he wanted to
-go or the mule went through his harness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wagon boss esteemed Sam and valued
-him at his worth, but it cannot be said that he
-was fond of the beast. There was much in
-his personality Uncle Henry did not like.
-Nor did the horse-wrangler. Had anybody
-requested Maclovio for a frank opinion of
-Sam, the Mexican would have spat with contempt
-and exhausted the resources of his patois.
-That nerveless limb of the devil?
-Don’t try to tell him the mule stampeded the
-staked horses by accident; Maclovio knew better;
-Sam had planned the whole turmoil from
-the start of the round-up. The wrangler had
-to herd the mules with the remuda, and the
-uncanny sagacity the drag-mule displayed in
-following out his own plans of grazing and
-enjoyment filled the Mexican with superstitious
-dread.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The ropers hated him with an active, abiding
-hatred they made no effort to conceal. He
-was the only member of the wagon team that
-would not submit to be caught without roping.
-The other mules would trot in with the horses
-from pasture and walk quietly to the
-wagon to be bridled, under the lure of grain;
-but not so with the big fellow. Sam never
-crowded away among the horses in foolish
-panic when a roper walked through the remuda
-toward him: that was the way the cow-ponies
-did, struggling blindly to get beyond
-range, and so the noose fell about their
-necks with ridiculous ease. That was not
-Sam’s method, he being temperamentally opposed
-to panic. He waited until the roper
-approached, waited until the coil sped toward
-him; and then only did he dodge. As a result,
-he eluded the noose time after time. In
-fact, it always took longer to rope Sam than
-any five of the hundred horses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One day the hawk-eyed autocrat of the
-Lazy L range spurred into camp in hot haste
-while the outfit was partaking of dinner.
-Heatedly he urged: “Watch your horses
-Uncle Henry.” Then he went to the fire,
-filled a tin plate with beef and beans, and a
-cup with coffee, and speared a bun.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shore. But what for special? They’re
-doing well and we ain’t lost one,” replied the
-wagon boss, making room for his chief on the
-shady spot where he squatted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you’re in luck. That band of mustangs
-has roamed down here from the Flying
-W. They passed within two miles of the
-ranch yesterday and, by Jupiter, if ol’ Pete
-didn’t join ’em. The ol’ fool! Eleven years
-that horse has been a cowhorse and now he runs
-off from the home pasture with a bunch of
-wild ones.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where’re they heading?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know as much as I do. I reckon the
-pasture is poor on the Flying W, don’t you?
-They ain’t had much rain and probably this
-bunch’ll make for the mountains. Better
-watch out,” the manager admonished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dave toiled with his team next afternoon
-through a waste of sand and mesquite. It
-was very hot--had there been such a thing as
-a thermometer on the wagon it would have
-registered better than 112--and he sat hunched
-on the seat, occasionally throwing an encouraging
-word to the straining mules. Behind
-came Al with the hoodlum wagon, which, being
-much lighter, made easy work for a pair
-of stout horses, so that Al dozed with his hat
-well down over his eyes and dreamed of a dress-maker
-in Doghole. It was growing towards
-sunset and they would pitch camp in the foothills
-and have supper ready for the boys before
-darkness fell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Without warning the mule team stopped and
-stood at gaze, rousing Dave abruptly. A
-dense cloud of dust was bearing down on them
-from the right and out of that swirl came the
-muffled pounding of many hoofs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The remuda’s stompeded,” yelled Al.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, they ain’t. No, they ain’t. It’s them
-wild horses. Git your gun, Al, quick!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the time Al had reached behind him
-with one hand to fumble for the rifle, the band
-had swept by and was disappearing. Probably
-there were thirty horses in it, but that was
-only a guess, because Dave obtained nothing
-more than a glimpse of streaming manes and
-tails. They ran compactly, a noble buckskin
-in the lead, and tailing the band was a white
-horse; it was evident that he held the furious
-pace only by a supreme effort.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There goes ol’ Pete. Blast him, if he ain’t
-hitting only the high spots,” Dave bawled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this moment his attention was called to
-Sam. The mule’s head was thrown high, the
-usually slouching ears were rigid and pricked
-forward, and he was sniffing the air restlessly.
-Once he made an abrupt lurch sideways as
-though to follow the free rovers, but the bit
-sawed his mouth, the collar and traces bound
-him and he could only champ impatiently. If
-a mule really knows how to tremble, Sam was
-trembling then--it was more a twitching of
-the muscles. The band was lost to sight and
-sound. Dave called a raucous command and
-once more they settled to work. Again Sam
-became listless and applied himself lethargically
-to pulling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A cool breeze whipped among the scrub-cedar
-of the foothills and went whining down
-the valley. Above the black rim of El Toro
-rose a rich, golden disc. Its pale light softened
-the outlines of the forms asleep upon the
-ground; in that kindly radiance the chuck-wagon
-and the unsightly confusion of camp
-merged into blurs that harmonized with the
-giant shadow of the mountain. The night
-was full of murmurings, tense with the suggestion
-of strange other worlds. Surely the
-plaintive wailing the breeze bore to Sam from
-El Toro’s pines was a message.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He stood with his nose up wind and drew in
-the scents of the wilds. His forelegs were
-hobbled, the rope twisted about them so tightly
-that he could barely shuffle when he grazed,
-and near at hand twelve horses were staked
-out. One of them, hopelessly entangled in his
-rope, was fighting it in terror; already he was
-on his knees unable to do aught but cut himself.
-In a draw a half-mile away the remuda
-cropped the grass under the eyes of a triple
-guard, for Uncle Henry was mindful of the
-manager’s warning, and upon Dave’s report he
-took no chances.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Out from the shadow cast by a mesquite
-bush a coyote skulked, and Sam snorted and
-shook his head in anger. The beast’s scent
-offended him, but he was not afraid. Somewhere
-in the dark a wildcat cried and the mule
-cocked his ears to listen. Next moment he
-jumped awkwardly aside as a polecat scurried
-by on a hunt for food.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The mule was growing restive. It was not
-nervousness--a mule is rarely nervous or
-frightened. When he runs away or pitches
-or balks, it is seldom because something
-has put fear into him; it is refined cussedness.
-Anyone who ever succeeded in owning
-a mule longer than a month will tell you that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of a sudden Sam sank his head and his powerful
-teeth met and rasped on the rope that
-chafed his legs. One of the strands parted
-and he strained to break the hobble, but too
-impatient to direct his gnawing to one spot,
-he was unsuccessful and finally desisted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Was that the call of a horse? It did not
-come from the direction in which the remuda
-had been driven off, and his ears tingled for a
-repetition of the sound. Twice he humped
-himself and struck out with his heels in the
-fury of impotence, and paused breathlessly
-with his eyes fixed on the yellow ball above El
-Toro’s summit. He took one step forward and
-became immovable as his glance fell to the wide
-lane of light it cast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Down this silver-shimmering path a horse
-came proudly. None but a free rover ever
-trod earth as he did. Sam could see the fiery
-eyes flashing suspicion, the regal head thrown
-back, the nostrils a-quiver to divine danger.
-He came like a phantom, lightly as one, silently
-as one, and a dozen yards away he
-halted, and there in the light of the moon surveyed
-the camp, the staked mounts, the sleeping
-men. It was the king of the wild horses.
-Far back of him a blotch on a hillside shifted
-with gleam of color.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A madness was come upon Sam. From out
-the night countless voices called to him appealingly;
-away out there in the illusive sheen
-must be liberty and delight. His sluggish
-blood was racing wildly, his body and limbs
-were a-quake with eagerness to respond to that
-appeal, to be gone into that alluring gloom.
-One of the staked animals whinnied and
-tugged fiercely on his rope.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At once the buckskin stallion blared a challenge,
-and he was away. The shadows swallowed
-him up. From over the hill came a rolling
-thunder, the noise of scores of flying hoofs,
-and Sam got the hobble between his teeth a
-second time, gave one ferocious upward rend,
-and the strands parted and dropped from him.
-He was free, and the wilderness was calling,
-calling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ol’ Hell-on-Wheels has done gone,” observed
-Dave.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Done gone?” the wagon boss echoed.
-“Gone where? He must be round somewheres.
-He cain’t git through the day without
-bread, Sam cain’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He done run off with them mustangs!”
-In Dave’s tone was depressed conviction.
-“You hearn ’em last night the same as me.
-Nobody seen him go, but look here. I jist
-found his hobble all bit in two.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And we’ve got to move camp this morning,”
-the wagon boss raved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“P’raps he’ll come back. I shouldn’t think
-they’d want Sam with ’em, Uncle Henery.
-He’d smash ’em all up, that bunch, he
-would!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He shore would.” Uncle Henry could not
-suppress a snigger of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He dispatched two of the boys to scour the
-country for the fugitive, and Dave hitched a
-two-mule team, falling a prey to melancholy
-as he moved about them in absolute security.
-How he missed that ol’ son-of-a-gun with his
-sly nibbles and his kicking and sublime obstinacy.
-These creatures pull? The cook grew
-hot with disdain and had two men told off to
-help haul the wagon with ropes in bad spots.
-In the days that followed he would often stop
-in his work and wonder what sense there was in
-going through life, anyway.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile, Sam flourished like unto the
-green bay tree. When the band sped away
-into the hills the night of his temptation and
-fall, the mule summoned up unguessed reserves
-of speed and trailed behind. The tumultuous
-joy of liberty fired him; his muscles
-responded to this new throbbing life like steel
-springs, so that Sam not only caught up with
-the mustangs, but ran well within himself in
-holding with them. The renegade Pete galloped
-in rear and, knowing Sam these many
-years, nickered him breathless welcome.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A recruit to the ranks was not a novelty,
-and though Sam was a mule, they accepted him
-readily enough, and for several days they
-roamed the cañons of El Toro. Rains had
-been frequent in this region and they obtained
-their fill of grass. As is the way of horses,
-the band paid scant attention to the mule; he
-grazed with them, and when any alarm or
-mere exuberance of spirits prompted a run,
-he could show his heels to all but the buckskin
-leader and a bay mare which seemed to carry
-wings on her feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And on the fifth day occasion arose for him
-to prove his prowess. In the band were a
-dozen mares, seven colts of various ages and
-fifteen horses, all under the leadership of the
-buckskin. Now, Sam was a mule of considerable
-common-sense; he never disputed the
-sovereignty of the stallion, but at the same time
-he was fully sensible of his own strength and
-fighting ability, having had occasion to test
-the same frequently, and he had not the remotest
-intention of allowing any horse on the
-range or other quadruped, to take undue liberties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As they came up from watering at a mountain
-spring at high noon, the mustangs were
-compelled to thread a narrow defile, and much
-crowding resulted. A colt ricochetted from
-the mule and lost his feet, whereupon the
-mother made at Sam with her teeth. This
-attack he ignored dexterously by bursting
-through the press and imposing the bodies of
-several horses between him and the indignant
-mare; but when a youthful black took it into
-his head that Sam was a recreant and could be
-bullied with impunity, various things happened.
-By now, they were out in the open.
-Trumpeting defiance, the black ran at him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The combat did not last three minutes. It
-is probable that the mule would have killed
-his assailant when he lay prone after the third
-onslaught, had not the leader trotted up in
-royal wrath to quell the disorder in his following.
-Should he go for him too, and reduce
-him to pulp? Sam’s eyes were glittering
-evilly, and the mulish, enduring rage was alive,
-but his habitual discretion cooled the impulse
-and he gave ground, his ears laid back, his retreat
-reluctant. The stallion wisely let him
-go.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Soon he attained to a species of leadership,
-a vice-royalty under the reigning buckskin.
-For one thing, his caution was tempered by
-almost human powers of discrimination; for another,
-he was never subject to the nervous tremors
-to which even the stallion fell victim and
-which were the inspiration of many stampedes.
-Sam could sense peril as far as any and was
-dubious, in a calm way, of everything he saw
-until he had investigated; but sudden noises,
-or a strange scent brought abruptly to his nostrils,
-did not send him flying over the country,
-shrilling warnings. He made reasonably sure
-of the possibility of danger before giving the
-alarm. Of his old masters, he was peculiarly
-wary, and twice at night, when they passed
-within a mile of the round-up camp, the mule’s
-nose acquainted him of its proximity, and he
-led them far to the west.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the outfit had almost completed the
-round-up, Sam wandered off from the band on
-a morning’s jaunt and came unexpectedly upon
-the remuda in a draw. The wrangler espied
-that unmistakable gait from afar and spurred
-desperately to catch him, but the mule was fleet
-as a greyhound and could not be headed. Two
-of the horses followed the fallen one. They
-knew Sam and respected him, and what was
-good enough for him would suit them admirably.
-Maclovio did not see their departure;
-madly scurrying from point to point to herd
-the restless horses, he failed to perceive the
-flight toward the gap, and it was only when
-the roping began after dinner that the loss was
-discovered. The Mexican prayed inwardly
-that Sam would break a leg and die by inches;
-if he would only break his neck, he would buy
-a dozen candles for the altar at Tucalari.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Old Pete McVey, the manager, sat on the
-stoop of the bunkhouse at headquarters and
-made a solemn vow to the skies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll hunt down every last one of that bunch
-and hang Sam’s hide to the saddle-shed.
-We’ve had two breakdowns with the wagon
-since he left--that ol’ mule we got from Doghole
-ain’t no good, Mit--and now two horses
-have run off.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I done told Uncle Henery and Dave that
-I felt shore it was Sam or some of them mustangs
-that stompeded those steers last week.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When I get him, the ol’ fool!” burst out
-the manager.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He organized a hunt, and with three men
-and four staghounds set out cheerily to wipe
-the wild horses from the face of the earth.
-The band winded them two miles away and
-carried the hunt to another range, but at last
-they crept within striking distance, and the
-chase was on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sam knew the dogs and had seen them run in
-sport about headquarters. Therefore, he let
-himself out and led the band beside the buckskin
-stallion, and for mile after mile they
-raced. A laggard was pulled down, the ancient
-sinner Pete--a hound leaped for his nose
-and Pete turned a somersault. McVey himself
-shot the injured animal, and they camped
-in the neighborhood and took up the pursuit
-next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a famous hunt. The dogs brought
-down four animals, and the Lazy L men, tiring
-in the chase, fired after the fugitives, killing
-three; but Sam remained ever in the van,
-unhurt. McVey led his men back, satisfied
-that the mustangs would seek new haunts,
-swearing vengefully at Sam and rejoicing in
-his heart that the giant mule had won to
-safety.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The band wintered in the mountains, and
-more than once during those terrible months
-the emaciated Hell-on-Wheels had to paw
-down through three inches of snow to get at
-the grass, and he obtained little more than
-enough to sustain life. Several of the colts
-succumbed to a three-days’ storm, and when
-spring was ushered in, with a soft wind that
-whispered tender promises to a stricken land,
-at least a dozen of the horses and mares were
-sickly. As for Sam, he was only hungry. A
-mule seems immune from disease, and hunger
-and thirst cannot wreak the havoc on his iron
-constitution that they create among the more
-sensitive horses. The mustangs ranged widely
-in a quest for good pasture and at last worked
-down to the Lazy L.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dave had put in the cold months in dispirited
-fashion, there being little to do. He
-moped around headquarters, and whenever the
-wagon boss ventured to consult him on preparations
-for the spring round-up, the cook
-maintained a glum silence. It would be a bad
-year, he was sure of that; they needn’t expect
-much of the calf crop. Far be it from him to
-discourage any man, least of all McVey and
-Uncle Henery, but he felt in his bones that ill
-luck would attend them. What could be expected
-of a wagon team that would let him
-mire down in Coyote Creek? The round-up
-would be a farce.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Them mustangs is back,” Reb announced,
-riding in from a winter camp. “I seen ’em
-topping a mesa over near Lone Pine Spring.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll give twenty dollars a head for ’em,” declared
-the manager, slowly removing the pipe
-from his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nearly a score of punchers equipped themselves
-to earn the reward. Some failed even
-to get trace of the band; others trailed them
-for days, but never came in sight; Dick, Bob
-Saunders and Maclovio got within half a mile
-and with relays of horses applied themselves
-to capture in a scientific way. They would
-run those mustangs off their legs. In four
-days they were back, with their mounts used up
-and McVey to welcome them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That ol’ mule kin smell us a mile,” Dick
-reported. “He always gives the alarm first.
-And run? Jim-in-ee, the way that rascal kin
-run!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dave listened and gloomed and finally took
-a great resolution. He might just as well be
-honest with himself--the round-up would
-never be the same without Sam. The cook had
-been a cowhand in his time and he hadn’t
-trailed cattle up through the Panhandle for
-nothing. Therefore he would not match his
-speed against the wild horses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Say, Mister McVey, I want to git a month
-off.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where’re you going now? This isn’t another
-trip to Doghole?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hoped you’d done forgot that,” Dave answered
-severely. “No, sir, I want to go and
-git Hell-on-Wheels.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How could you catch him? I’ve tried; all
-the boys have tried. And you haven’t ridden
-in ten years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You let me try and you’ll see.” Dave tried
-to draw in his waist and appear athletic as the
-manager ran his eye over his two hundred and
-fourteen pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You couldn’t get that mule in a thousand
-years. Unless”--as an afterthought--“you
-spread breadpans all over the range and set
-traps.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s where you’re wrong, Mister McVey,
-sir. I ain’t rode much since I took to
-cookin’, but I’m pretty active. You gimme
-that month and you’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Go ahead. I’d just as soon pay the reward
-to you as to anybody else--sooner.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sam was the first of the band to sight the
-enemy trudging through the sand of the plain
-toward them. Far behind a burro followed,
-led by another man on foot. This truly was
-interesting. The mule advanced for a closer
-inspection and the others awaited his verdict,
-having implicit confidence in him as a sentinel.
-Thus it happened that Dave gained to within
-three hundred yards before Sam flagged his
-tail and departed. The horses massed swiftly
-into a compact body and followed, but they
-did not run as they would have run from
-mounted men. Instinctively they knew that
-this thing on two legs could not catch them, so
-it was at a swinging trot that they breasted
-a hill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On its crest the mustangs slowed down;
-they dropped to a walk and turned to look
-back at what pursued. There plodded old
-Dave, apparently paying them no special attention,
-but nevertheless coming in their direction.
-Once more Sam waited until the cook
-came within shouting distance, then, the buckskin
-raising the alarm, they cantered off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So it went all the afternoon. Dave made
-no attempt to get close up with them; he did
-not conceal his approach; he did not stalk them;
-and he was especially cautious not to alarm
-to an extent that would send them fleeing
-for miles. Instead, he was satisfied merely to
-keep them in sight. Sometimes he paused to
-wipe the sweat from his face and neck, but he
-betrayed no impatience. Far behind a burro
-followed, led by another man on foot, and
-when the cook changed his course so did the
-burro, still maintaining its distance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sam was sorely puzzled. That stout figure
-possessed a peculiar attraction for him. When
-he had put a considerable tract between himself
-and it, he could not forbear to stop and watch
-what it would do. Still it came on--yet it was
-not threatening. The mule’s sense of danger
-was lulled. And he was not the only perplexed
-member of the band: curiosity had the
-stallion in its grip, too. There was not a horse
-among the free rovers but would slacken gait
-to ascertain where the foolish pursuer walked
-now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the time the sun died behind a fringe
-of hills, Sam and the others were horribly
-thirsty. They swung around in a wide semicircle
-and struck for a lake six miles distant.
-Dave followed. Hardly had they drunk half
-their fill, standing waist-deep in the cooling
-water, when the expectant mule warned them
-of the approach of that shadowing figure.
-They waded out and made off reluctantly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cook arrived two minutes later and
-stretched out on his back on the edge of the
-lake and thought with sweet sorrow of the days
-when he weighed one hundred and sixty.
-Presently the man with the burro joined him,
-and they took down their bedding, staked out
-the tireless pack-animal, built a fire of dried
-broomweed, and ate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They won’t go far from here to-night. It
-jist happens there ain’t any water nearer than
-twenty miles. No-oo, I reckon they’ll hang
-round somewheres near,” Dave observed, rolling
-a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He divined correctly. Sam and his companions
-discovered that they were hungry, very
-hungry. While they did not realize it, they
-had eaten little that afternoon, for no sooner
-would they shake off the pursuer and fall to
-nibbling nervously at the dried grass than he
-would reappear, persistent as their own shadows,
-and they would continue their flight.
-Now he followed no more, and they must eat.
-Eat they did to some extent, but a burning
-curiosity and a vague uneasiness had seized
-upon them. They felt irresistibly attracted by
-the campfire that sparkled in the darkness
-down by the water they craved; time after
-time they would near it fearfully. Without
-turning his head Dave knew that dozens of
-wondering eyes surveyed him from the outer
-rim of dark fifty yards away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before dawn the cook and his assistant had
-made fast the burro’s burden with the “diamond
-hitch,” and hard upon the coming of
-light Dave started out alone. In an hour he
-was in sight of the mustangs. Sam shook his
-head in irritation and the band moved off
-slowly. Dave followed. Far behind came a
-burro, led by a man on foot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He camped at noon in a stretch of alkali, and
-because there was no water near they partook
-sparingly of some the cook carried in tins slung
-over the burro’s load. As for the beast, he
-must wait till nightfall, which did not worry
-the burro in the least. Well Dave knew that
-the mustangs must make for water.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A dozen times in a day the cook would be
-out of view of the fugitives and a dozen times
-he would catch up with them, disturbing their
-intermittent grazing. It is doubtful if he
-averaged more than twenty miles in twenty-four
-hours; it is certain that the wild horses
-covered nearly three times that distance in
-their outbursts of panic and their doublings
-back on the pursuer. The chase led in a triangle
-that took in all the water-holes within a
-radius of ninety miles, and almost always Dave
-contrived to arrive before the band had got
-quite their fill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sam had lost at least a hundred pounds by
-the end of a week and was become gaunt and
-savage. Several of the colts, only a few
-months old, gave up the flight and their mothers
-forsook the band in safety, the pursuers
-ignoring them. The others kept on. Sam’s
-contempt for the slow crawling thing behind
-them was changing to a haunting dread, and
-he became subject to petty fits of irritation.
-Why couldn’t the enemy come on boldly?
-Why couldn’t he match his speed with theirs
-in one grand rush? But no, there he was, patiently
-legging it through the sand, through
-grass, over foothills, up mountain trails,
-through gorges, down into valleys. A horrible
-fascination took possession of the mule.
-Had Dave turned about to retrace his steps,
-it is probable that Sam would have followed
-out of curiosity to see where he was going; but
-Dave still came on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>About this time, too, they got a taste of real
-summer. From an empty sky the sun smote
-the land, browning the hills, crisping the grass
-in the valleys until it crackled into dust. First
-one mountain stream ceased to run, then another;
-a creek that used to sweep down in a
-torrent after the spring rains now dribbled
-among scorching boulders. Thus came about
-the beginning of the end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They cain’t stand more’n another week of
-this, Charlie,” Dave remarked, as they camped
-beside a hatful of water in the foothills.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon not. Did you notice some of
-them mares? They’s all in. You got within
-fifty yards of ’em once to-day, Dave. The
-burro here has kep’ up well. Ain’t you, you
-greedy devil? She’s looking fine. I’m giving
-her corn.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Never did the mustangs get enough to eat.
-Another sort of madness than the madness for
-liberty was laying hold of Sam. His days
-consisted of timid attempts at grazing, from
-which he would start at the lightest sound; of
-enforced pilgrimages from one pasture to another;
-and it must have been four hundred
-hours since he had had his fill of water. More
-than once, in a frenzy of revolt, he put five
-miles between him and his clinging disturber;
-but after two hours of uneasy nibbling he would
-be interrupted once again--and again must
-move on. What food he got failed to nourish
-as it should, and the rest he snatched was not
-rest. In the night, when he might have lost
-his foe, the mule knew well that he was near,
-for there in the blackness his fire sent up its
-sparks and it drew him and his companions like
-a magnet. No matter where they roamed, the
-cook managed to spend the dark hours near
-water, and the band could not tear themselves
-from the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There came a day when Sam’s ribs showed
-pitifully through his rough coat and he shuffled
-along in desperate dejection, his ears flopping.
-A heavy fatigue numbed his limbs, made cruel
-weights of them, and he was thirsty, deliriously
-thirsty; but if his plight was bad, that of the
-mustangs was worse. They stumbled coughing
-through the dust, too tired to lift their
-feet. Occasionally one broke into a half-hearted
-trot which survived only a few steps.
-The race was run.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within six hours the band began to break
-up. First the mares and colts dropped out,
-careless of what might befall. The mothers
-went weakly to feeding on the burnt grass,
-their offspring hovering near in the last stages
-of exhaustion; but to these Dave paid no attention.
-He was after Hell-on-Wheels, and
-he did not intend to inject new life into the
-jaded survivors by the slaughter of their beaten
-companions. By his orders Charlie, too, ignored
-them, though his fingers itched as his
-mind dwelt on the reward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four of the horses lagged, staggered forward
-a few paces and fell behind, spent, swaying
-dizzily as they moved aside to let Dave
-pass. They were oblivious to everything now,
-insensible to peril, scarcely able to discern objects
-through their glazed eyes; but Sam and
-the stallion and some few kept on. Dave
-followed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hot rebellion surged up in the mule more
-than once, sapping his last ounce of spirit. Up
-would go his head in defiance and he would increase
-his lead; but the strength was ebbing
-from the wonderful muscles of him; he was sick
-at heart and wanted to lie down. Ahead, perhaps
-an hour’s walk, he knew there was water.
-He must reach that. Would this thing that
-hung to their rear never give them respite?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dave trudged now only twenty yards back.
-He was footsore, a fearful weariness was upon
-him and the heat was awful. Yet no thought
-of giving up occurred to his mind; his patience
-was unfailing. Not once did he do a hurried
-thing to alarm the quarry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><a id='run'></a></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i049.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0003' style='width:75%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'>“<span class='it'>What you mean by running off this a-way?</span>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the twenty-fourth day. All around
-them stretched a desert of alkali broken by
-patches of tree-cactus and clumps of bear-grass,
-and through the white, chalky dust Sam
-toiled dispiritedly a dozen yards in front of
-the stallion. Behind the faltering buckskin
-limped five skeletons of horses, and ten yards
-behind the hindermost walked Dave. There
-was no need that Charlie remain far in rear.
-The mustangs did not notice him, and he followed
-close with the burro.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rovers had drunk deep that morning at
-a spring on the edge of the desert--this being
-as Dave would have it--and now all vigor of
-body and spirit had departed. Sam’s head
-swung low to the ground, his knees were shaking
-and he saw nothing of what he passed.
-To his bloodshot eyes these scorched wastes
-were a wavering mist, and he knew only that
-he must go on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly, as though by telepathic agreement,
-the weird procession halted. Sam
-turned. He faced the cook as he came up
-without hesitation, rope in hand. Dave slipped
-the noose about his neck and rubbed the dusty
-muzzle sunk against his hip.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You ol’ fool, you!” he mouthed at him.
-“What you mean by running off this a-way?
-Didn’t you know that team weren’t no good
-without you? What did you reckon I was going
-to do, you pore ol’ son-of-a-gun?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He ran his eye over the emaciated body; then
-his glance fell to his own shrunken outline.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon we’re both some thinner, Sam.
-And my feet’s awful sore. What you need is
-corn. Here, Charlie, gimme that ‘morale’!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Staked out with the nosebag over his head,
-the mule munched dully on the life-giving
-grain, while Dave prepared dinner and Charlie
-moved from point to point on the plain with
-a rifle, earning half a month’s pay every time
-he got near a horse. Charlie began to figure
-he would be a rich cowman some day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two hours later the men were smoking in
-the peace and content of hard work well done,
-when Sam walked stiffly to the end of his rope.
-By straining on it he could just reach the
-edge of the campfire. Dave rose up on his
-elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hi, there! Git your nose out’n that pan,
-you rascal! I swan, he’s hunting for bread.”</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chII'></a>II<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE MARAUDER</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Six frowsy buzzards sat on a tree and
-made mock of his hunger. With his
-bushy tail drooping dismally between his
-legs, he zigzagged his way up the wide, dry
-bed of Red River, flitting from cover to cover
-like an uneasy ghost. Up one steep bank he
-sidled, to squat on his haunches, whence he surveyed
-the camp hungrily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s a big ol’ ki-yote,” said the hoodlum
-driver. “Git your gun, Dave.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cook abandoned the washpan with alacrity
-and ransacked the chuck-wagon for his
-weapon. When he rejoined Mac the coyote
-was still in view, but he seemed farther away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He done moved. I cain’t hit him from
-here,” said the cook.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I been watching him and he ain’t budged.
-Yes, he has, too. I’ll swan, I never seen him
-do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The prairie wolf now sat a good three hundred
-yards away, his back to the camp, as
-though indifferent and contemptuous of it.
-Dave knelt on one heel, took slow, careful aim,
-and fired. A spurt of sand five yards short of
-the coyote was the result. The animal half
-turned his head, the sensitive upper lip quivered
-and curled over the wicked fangs, for all
-the world like a sneer, and then he resumed his
-placid scrutiny of nothing. Mac forcibly removed
-the rifle from Dave’s grasp, deaf to his
-picturesque explanation of the miss, adjusted
-the sight and lay down.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You had it sighted for a hunderd yards,”
-he rebuked. “I put her up a few notches.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whee-ee-ee,” whined a snub-nosed leaden
-pellet. A spurt of sand five yards beyond the
-coyote was the result. It aroused the animal
-to instant activity. If he was not beyond
-range, then the wagon had a better gun than
-he had ever met with, so he glided away like a
-shadow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There goes two dollars bounty,” sighed the
-cook regretfully. “That’s just what I done
-lost to Jack, shootin’ craps last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where’s that nester’s ol’ dog that was
-smelling round the pots this morning?” Mac
-demanded. “There he goes now. Hi-yi, ol’
-feller! Go git him, boy! Go to him!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A yellow mongrel, half shepherd and a mixture
-of other breeds, abandoned his slinking
-tour of the camp and became at once a respectable,
-alert dog, with a job. He sighted
-the fleeing coyote, and, giving tongue, followed
-after.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He won’t never catch him. Those lil’ ol’
-ki-yotes kin outrun a streak of lightning, and
-stop to sleep a-doing it,” said Mac.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was evident that the pursuit did not worry
-the fugitive greatly. He loped along easily,
-with the dog gaining at every frantic leap until
-a scant yard separated them, when, still maintaining
-his careless gait, the coyote veered to
-the south; and yet the distance between them
-did not diminish. The dog was blowing and
-puffing throaty threats, while the wolf watched
-him out of the corner of one eye. With a
-mad burst of speed the cur gained a yard,
-whereupon something happened. Without
-appearing to strain himself at all, the coyote
-simply disappeared from view over the next
-rise. The dog had seen a pepper-and-salt,
-gray streak flash over the crest, but that was
-all. He stopped in a dazed sort of way to
-figure the matter out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While he was figuring, a foxlike head poked
-itself over a clump of bear-grass and the coyote
-yawned in his face. Once more the chase was
-on, with redoubled fury.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was an old game to Scartoe. He had
-raced all sorts of dogs, from collie to fox terrier,
-and only once, when a greyhound ran
-him, had he stood in danger. Greatly to his
-chagrin and alarm on that occasion, he had
-been forced to switch the lithe pursuer unexpectedly
-into a barb-wire division-fence, to save
-his hide. As he ran now he was studying this
-loud-voiced antagonist of the yellow hair.
-Whatever he saw, the result was wholly surprising.
-He increased his lead by ten yards,
-then whirled about and sat down, at which the
-dog plowed up the ground for five feet in
-a panic-stricken effort to put on the brakes,
-and promptly changed his course. Still
-growling, he trotted away toward a cactus far
-to the left, as though suddenly made aware of
-something extremely interesting to be found
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The coyote’s lip flickered, and he walked to
-the sandy sides of a ravine. With a final look
-back from its top, he descended leisurely; then,
-once in the creek bed, glided at top speed in
-an opposite direction. He was bound homeward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All of which goes to show the delicacy of
-coyote judgment and the depths of his knowledge
-of human and canine nature. For there
-are dogs which will close on a coyote and kill
-him at the first opportunity and with no hesitation.
-Pluck does not run exclusively in
-breeds, and individual dogs of all kinds have
-been known to go for the prairie thief at sight,
-and even for the redoubtable lobo; but others
-there are which will shirk a tussle with this
-scorned of the wolf tribe, this scavenger and
-outcast of the wild. And a coyote, being lowest
-in the ranks of those obsessed of fear, is the
-readiest to detect cowardice in others; moreover,
-he has the cunning to profit by it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Enjoyable as this little breather had been, it
-had not provided the meal for which he was
-searching. Rather it had whetted the gnawing
-demand for it and the prospect of obtaining
-anything seemed more remote than ever,
-because he had builded some hopes on scraps
-from the camp. Scartoe eased to a walk--not
-the brisk, firm patter of the dog, but a sneaking,
-apologetic, tortuous gait, that was yet
-swift and wonderfully noiseless.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Prairie dogs there were none, though he
-scour the length and breadth of six hundred
-square miles. Poison had done its work thoroughly
-and only the empty holes remained,
-half grown over with grass and weeds, a constant
-menace to horsemen. Of ground squirrel
-there were a few, and at certain seasons the
-sage grouse furnished him succulent meals;
-but these were trifles, after all, and it took
-infinite patience and stealth to secure them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scartoe crept slantwise up a ridge and took
-a look around. The sun beat down on a land
-it had desolated. Where creeks had been were
-now gorges of baked clay; a long stretch of
-sage-grass was white with dust and crackling;
-large fissures dumbly voiced the parched
-ground’s protests; the bear-grass and cactus
-showed scrawny and dried; and above this
-scorched land rose a canopy of jumbled white
-clouds, magnificent, matchless. A score or
-two of lean cattle were browsing on the slopes,
-nibbling the long, yellow bean pods from mesquite
-trees, but of other signs of life there were
-none, save the scurrying green and blue and
-golden-brown lizards, which darted from stone
-to stone at amazing speed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And this had been the style of his hunting
-for weeks, so that he was gaunt and desperate.
-Nothing in all the world in the shape of meat,
-except creatures so large and strong he dare
-not attack. Nothing--his restless eyes became
-riveted on a bush not fifty yards to his
-right. Surely something had stirred there.
-His nose was thrust forward to give his extraordinarily
-strong sense of smell a chance,
-and it told him what his eyes were unable
-wholly to define. There was a calf behind that
-bush.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His famished stomach drove him forward,
-while his natural cowardice whispered caution.
-It was plain to him that the calf was very
-young. Otherwise he would have wanted the
-assistance of a brother marauder. Even now,
-however, those cattle grazing on the slopes
-haunted him, but a fleeting glance over the immediate
-vicinity assured him the prey was unguarded.
-So he stole forward. His advance
-was a miracle of furtive effort, and such was
-the beast’s inherited cunning that, quite unconsciously,
-he took advantage of spots where his
-color blended so harmoniously with the rough
-ground that wolf and rock and shrub were indistinguishable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The gods of little calves must have been
-wide-awake that day; else what could have
-prompted the youngster to stir and lift his
-head? He had heard no sound; no scent had
-reached his nostrils. The coyote was too old
-a hand at stalking for that. A pair of round,
-fear-distended eyes were turned toward the
-terrible thing that shot through space straight
-for his neck, and a plaintive bawl was cut short
-in the middle. That was because the calf got
-into action--action quicker than any in his life
-of three weeks. He lurched upward and departed,
-minus the left ear. The beast snarled
-and turned to pursue, but a noise diverted him.
-Like a man waking from a dream, the coyote
-caught, too late, the rush of hoofs. He shrank
-aside, but not far enough. The mother’s horns
-caught him above the shoulder and ripped him
-to the flank, tossing him five feet into the air.
-When he came down he tarried not, but,
-bloody, torn and mad with fear, sought the
-safety of his cañon retreat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His wife and five babies were awaiting him.
-He had been out all night on his prowl for
-food, and it was now three hours after sunup,
-the hour when, ordinarily, he would be stretched
-out on a sunny knoll, taking a nap in the content
-of a full stomach. A score of yards from
-the den his nose told him that the family had
-fed, so he came trotting down the rocky creek-bed,
-stiffly expectant. The tiny, furry, broad-headed
-pups were snarling and tugging at the
-remnants of a meal and, hungry though he
-was, he paused to watch them with a certain
-fatherly pride. Then, at a growl from his
-mate, he slunk forth again on his quest. His
-wound smarted, but did not cripple him, and
-hunger was a spur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><a id='buzz'></a></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i062.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0004' style='width:75%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'>“<span class='it'>The wolf drove away a couple of buzzards and fell upon this savagely</span>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He found what his wife had said he would
-find, the remains of the offal of a heifer which
-the outfit had killed the previous day for food.
-Luckier in her search, the mother coyote had
-come upon the abandoned camp late the previous
-night, though it was ten miles from home
-and she disliked such distant hunting; and,
-having fed, she had carried a huge strip of the
-entrails to her babies. The wolf drove away a
-couple of buzzards and fell upon this savagely;
-and, having gorged, sat down to lick his cut.
-In a few minutes he moved painfully on the
-back trail, for his hurts were stiffening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The family home was a simple affair, such as
-the original families of human kind might have
-begun life with. Anything provided with an
-olfactor could ascertain its propinquity at a distance
-of forty yards, for it gave off the stinging,
-musty odor of the wolf tribe. There
-were also numerous faint trails hard by, some
-of them blind trails, contrived cunningly to
-draw the stupid hunter astray. The genuine
-paths led into a broader, clearly-defined
-one which ended in a hole about two feet square
-in the wall of an arroyo, and this entrance was
-concealed from the casual observer by a scrub-cedar
-that clung to a precarious foothold and
-subsisted on nothing. No water had come
-down this channel in generations and they felt
-safe on that score.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hallway of the home was little more
-than a yard long. It led into a den whereto
-no light penetrated--a hollowed space perhaps
-two and a half feet high, and large
-enough for the head of the house to turn
-around in. There were also some ramifications
-to it, four smaller cells dug out in the
-same fashion, and out of one of these another
-passage led upward. It came out on top of
-the embankment, twenty feet away; for Scartoe
-was a cautious rascal and had no intention
-of letting his domicile become a trap. He desired
-it to be a haven and, therefore, he had
-selected a residence with a back door, though
-most of his tribe contented themselves with
-an entrance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This caution was habitual with him and was
-the child of experience. Experience had
-taught him some bitter lessons and had given
-him his name. For, in the spring of the year
-when he reached his full height and was filled
-with conceit of his strength, a famine threatened.
-The wolf ranged far and got nothing.
-Hitherto suspicious of the haunts of men, he
-overcame his fears at last and raided the ranch
-headquarters and came away with a lusty young
-rooster. Next night he attempted to repeat
-this feat, and while nosing the skeleton of a
-cow lying close to the home pasture fence,
-something snapped over his foot. A numbing
-pain shot through him. When he bounded
-high and backward to clear, he was jerked to
-the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Clasped like a vise about his toes was a steel
-trap, a mercilessly powerful contraption of
-chains, weighted with two hundred pounds.
-It had him, but fortunately his leg was not
-caught. In his frenzy of terror, freedom
-was worth any sacrifice or pain. He sank his
-teeth into his own flesh and gnawed his toes
-off, and holding the bleeding stump up in
-front of him, fled on three legs. Not a sound
-did he make during his agony. It was not
-pluck, but a stoicism begot of fear. Had he
-whined, a charge of buckshot would have ended
-his days; for the cook dozed fitfully behind a
-woodpile fifty yards away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the foot grew well he was a trifle short
-in the left foreleg; but it made scarcely any
-difference in his gait. The only difference
-was in the trail he made, and from that he was
-known as Scartoe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hurt the cow gave him healed with astonishing
-rapidity, for sunlight and dry air are
-Nature’s magicians. While taking a siesta in
-front of his den next afternoon and tenderly
-licking the ragged wound, he was witness of
-a strange encounter. His pups were frisking
-about, tumbling and growling and snapping in
-youthful enjoyment of life, while the mother
-lay beside him, encouraging these evidences of
-prospective adult ferocity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the foot of the knoll whereon they reposed,
-something rose, wavering, with a fear-thrilling
-rattle, and the pups scattered. At
-the same moment a sharp hiss answered this
-first challenge. With eyes glowing and ears
-cocked, husband and wife waited for the battle
-between these enemies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A dark green reptile with cream-colored
-bands, about forty inches in length, was circling
-a rattler. The latter lay coiled, ready to
-strike, his folds curling and uncurling in long
-ripples as his head turned to follow the movements
-of his enemy. Fully six feet in length
-he was and of a prodigious thickness; but fear
-had already entered the heart of him. The
-king-snake sped around him with the speed of
-light; once, twice, thrice the rattler launched
-a blow, but there was no foe there. Then
-the malignant killer was on him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A king-snake is immune from the rattler’s
-poison and wages constant warfare on all reptiles.
-Such is the steel-wire strength of his
-coils that the size of an adversary never daunts
-him for an instant. He will tackle a snake
-twice his size and weight, and he will kill him,
-too. It was all over in a few minutes. Round
-and round his victim he folded himself; each
-second the pressure increased. There was
-some desperate flaying of the ground as the
-combatants struggled, for the enemy of all
-brute creation was fighting for his life. When
-he lay dead, the king-snake let go and tried to
-swallow him. He did, in fact, get him half
-down, but the practical difficulty in the way
-of surrounding an object larger than one’s
-self triumphed over his appetite. So he gave
-up the attempt and the reptile.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk100'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bow-wow! Ki-yi, yeow-eow-eow-eow-eow.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scartoe stood on a butte, with his nose pointing
-to the moon, his tail between his legs, and
-weirdly gave vent to his feelings in song. It
-began with two short barks and trailed into a
-succession of piercing, reverberating yelps,
-that melted into one another and rolled and
-echoed, as by the ventriloquist’s art, until the
-night grew hideous with the clamor. One
-would have sworn that a hundred coyotes held
-the hill, and were indulging in some funereal
-close-harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was his evensong. It came welling from
-his throat in a flood, in spite of him, and the coyote
-could no more control the impulse, the inheritance
-of ages, than a man can choke back
-the hiccoughs. His stomach would retch and
-his neck muscles work in the throes of it
-until the song was released. Once again, in
-the course of twenty-four hours, did the impulse
-seize him. Just before the sun crept
-over the edge of the world his nose would be
-tilted toward the gray vault of heaven.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bow-wow! Ki-yi, yeow-eow-eow-eow-eow!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He desisted at last and, considerably uplifted,
-departed on his hunt for food. A score
-of his fellows he met in his prowling, some hunting
-in couples; but Scartoe was a family man
-and a lone marauder, and would have none of
-them. In the half million acres composing
-the ranch were fully four hundred of his brethren.
-This in spite of a once vigorous warfare,
-in which poison and trap and gun and dog had
-been the weapons. In the last three years the
-campaign against the coyotes had waned,
-though each head would bring the taker a
-bounty at the county-seat and another at headquarters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is not to be wondered at that the thieves
-became arrogant and venturesome. They reveled
-in their depredations and pitted their
-keen wits against man’s intelligence with increasing
-boldness. What if twenty thousand
-of their brethren had been killed in the previous
-twelvemonth, in the national forest preserves
-alone? Many times twenty thousand
-survived in the cattle country; and official estimate
-gives it that each coyote does damage to
-stock to the amount of one hundred dollars annually.
-Scartoe must have passed, on the
-silent trails in his night hunt, the destroyers of
-ten thousand dollars’ worth of stock in a year.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once he paused in a patch of broomweed
-to send his doleful cry to the stars. It gurgled
-from his throat like water from a bottle.
-He gave tongue no more that night. From
-the mouth of a cañon, far to his right, sounded
-a long-drawn howl, plaintive, threatening.
-Hardly had it ceased than a piercing scream
-broke from a hackberry tree within a hundred
-yards of where Scartoe crouched. Truly the
-lords of the wilds were abroad to-night; but it
-was not the panther’s cry which drove Scartoe
-from the trail. What he was giving right-of-way
-to was the lobo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The coyote drew off a short distance and
-sank humbly to earth as a loafer wolf came
-running out of the shadows. He was a huge
-fellow, almost red along the back, gray as to
-his underbody, and he loped purposefully, bent
-on slaughter. Scartoe sank lower and groveled.
-In imagination he was fawning upon
-this mighty creature that inspired him with
-dread and respect; for, though of the same
-race, they were far apart as the poles. He
-knew the magnificent courage of the loafer
-and, when the King hunted, to him belonged
-the trail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He watched him go by, and once more
-wended his devious way across country. A
-nice little scheme had hatched in his brain as
-he lay there, born of a long-time feud. Forty
-turkeys, eighty chickens and nineteen cocks
-were now to his credit; to the credit of the
-ranch-house cook stood the toes of his left foreleg.
-One turkey-gobbler remained--that he
-knew with accuracy, and Scartoe speculated
-pleasurably thereon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Had he been a human being, he would have
-laughed as he slid under the outer barb-wire
-fence at headquarters. Ten paces away he
-had scented the handiwork of man. Sprinkle
-and smooth the sand as he might, set bait and
-lay trap ever so cunningly, the cook could not
-foil that marvelous instinct. There were but
-two holes by which Scartoe could enter the
-pen; before he started he was well aware that
-a trap lay in each. Approaching one, three
-feet from it, he scratched loose stones and
-earth behind him in a shower on a spot which
-looked too smooth and inviting to his eye and
-where his nose told him a man had fussed with
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At last he was rewarded. A stick he rolled
-over touched the spring, and the steel jaws
-leaped together with a clash. He proceeded
-to dig all around the trap until it was wholly
-exposed, after which he gave a disdainful sniff
-and jumped over it. Thirty seconds later he
-emerged from the pen bearing a fine, fat gobbler,
-and away he went, careless of the trail of
-feathers his dragging prey made.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You-all kin see for yourself what he done,”
-cried the cook, gloriously profane, next morning.
-“He knowed that was there all the time
-and simply sprung it. Got that lil’ ol’ gobbler,
-too; last one I had.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ki-yotes is shore smart,” the straw boss
-agreed. “Smart as humans, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Smart as humans?” the cook retorted contemptuously.
-“Why, ol’ Dick is a human.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s so,” said the straw boss thoughtfully.
-“Well, they’s smarter, then; smart as
-a good hoss.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That ol’ ki-yote and me’s been fighting for
-three years. I near had him once; but he
-done chawed his foot off--they’s that treacherous.
-Only last week I done set a rooster in
-that mesquite tree there, and put traps all
-around. He had to step in one to git that
-bird. Know what he done?” The cook’s
-voice rose to a howl. “I’ll eat my shirt if he
-didn’t go off and git a friend, who sprung the
-trap and got caught. Yes, sir. Then ol’
-Scartoe, he done jump in and got the rooster.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ever try poison?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Won’t touch it. He kin smell strych-nine
-farther’n he kin see. Ate some once and
-near died, I reckon, for I seen the place where
-he was took sick. Every trap I set, he just
-scratches stones or sticks on to it until he
-springs the thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The straw boss, riding to a division camp the
-next day, came upon Scartoe trying to imitate
-a rock as he slept on the brow of a hill. The
-rider had no gun, but got down his rope and
-rode toward the sleeper carelessly, so as not
-to alarm him. The coyote let him approach
-within thirty yards, then awoke to yawn; but
-he was wrong in his estimate of the straw
-boss, because that worthy gentleman, hot with
-the memory of the recent indignity, let out a
-whoop and gave chase. Before he could warm
-up into anything like his usual form, a rope
-sped through the air and encircled Scartoe’s
-neck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, there are three rules to observe in roping
-coyotes. The first is not to rope them, and
-the other two do not matter. A noose was
-nothing new to Scartoe and he knew the parry.
-Before it could tighten and jerk him into eternity,
-he took one slashing bite at it and the rope
-parted, cut clean. Next moment the coyote
-had mingled with the scenery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was a serious-minded animal, yet he permitted
-himself some diversions. When his
-wife found the remains of the beef, Scartoe
-realized that there was a round-up in progress,
-which meant food in plenty, and he took to following
-the outfit from camp to camp, singing
-to them about nine o’clock every night and
-again before the dawn. They showed their appreciation
-by taking pot shots at him with a
-.30-30; but he bore a charmed life. He
-managed to pick up much good meat by this
-association, too, for the outfit killed a heifer
-every other day and left enough to feed half
-a dozen coyotes. Sometimes he had to scare
-away foolish cows or steers, which, attracted
-by the smell of blood, would be holding moaning
-wakes over the remains; and always he
-had to be on the watch for the buzzards or they
-would forestall him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lightly footing it about camp one night, he
-startled a work-horse, himself a night prowler,
-bent on stealing buns from the chuck-wagon
-which he helped to haul during the day. A
-coyote would never attack a horse, placing
-too much value on his life, but this beast
-was a young, inexperienced creature and did
-not know that. With a snort of dismay, he
-dashed off. Pleased with himself, Scartoe
-gave chase in pure sport, precisely as a playful
-dog might have done. Twice around the camp
-they ran, then through it, stampeding eleven
-staked horses and smashing the guy-ropes of
-the fly, which fell on the cook, who never
-claimed to be a Christian and had no fears of
-an after-life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The punchers awoke, cursing volubly, and
-one of them, sleeping remote from the others
-on the edge of camp, shied a boot at the wolf.
-He stopped in his run, smelled of it, then bore
-it homeward. It would make a fine plaything
-for the babies. The puncher rode twenty-seven
-miles to headquarters next day, in his
-socks, to get a new pair of boots.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four months passed thus pleasurably.
-Sometimes the family nearly starved, at others
-the puppies sagged in the middle from
-overeating. Always there were bones and
-odds and ends of hides old Scartoe had hidden
-away to gnaw on in moments of leisure, but
-they made poor stays to hunger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When winter shut down on the land Scartoe
-got rid of wife and children. He simply wandered
-off when the puppies grew big enough
-to care for themselves; and he found another
-home in an isolated ravine. In the cold nights
-that followed he took to consorting with other
-bachelors, roving spirits all. Very often they
-hunted in bands. They were few in number,
-because it is not coyote nature to run in packs,
-but this union gave them strength and made
-them infinitely more dangerous. Two score
-times they stalked and killed lonely, unprotected
-calves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Later, they were so hard put to it for food
-that courage was born in them. One night
-four surrounded an eight-months’-old steer one
-of them would never have tackled singly, and
-slew him. It was Scartoe who devised the
-plan that the three should run him by a bush,
-behind which he crouched. It was Scartoe
-who leapt swiftly, unerringly, for the nose
-and brought him down. And it was he who
-got the lion’s share of the spoils.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet they were cowards for all that. A
-coyote is always a coward, even when driven
-frantic by hunger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the storm kings holding sway, their
-foraging became less and less fruitful. Several
-of his race departed for new hunting
-grounds, but Scartoe stayed in his own domain
-and weathered the gales.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Twice had he to eat of his own kind. Toward
-break of a wintry day he and one companion
-slunk homeward from an unsuccessful
-scout, their empty stomachs crying aloud for
-flesh. They watched each other in suspicion,
-for in each one the same desire was uppermost.
-Ahead of them, crossing their trail, a
-wounded coyote dragged himself--spent, done
-almost to death in a grapple with a nester’s
-dog. They fell upon and slew and ate him.
-Later, a full month, or perhaps two, when the
-same companion grew wasted and weak from
-hunger, and in all the forsaken country they
-could not kill, when not even a field mouse rewarded
-long hours of hunting, Scartoe ran at
-him and, with one shrewd stroke upward, slit
-his throat and let out the life blood. He ate
-his fill and came once more into his strength.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only once during that time of stress did he
-pit his cunning against man’s guile. That
-was when the snow was off the ground and a
-party of visitors at the ranch-house hunted
-him with imported dogs. Scartoe made the
-most glorious mess of his trail. He went back
-on it, crossed, recrossed, waded up-stream, returned
-to the starting point, and employed all
-the tricks his long years had taught him.
-Then he lay down behind a dead prickly pear
-and watched the hunt; watched the chagrin of
-the men; watched every movement of the dogs,
-nosing and worrying. Tiring of this in half
-an hour, he went to his den and slept. They
-never untangled the web of his weaving.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When spring came Scartoe was looking
-shabby. He was morose, too, and had a
-longing for companionship. A week of fine
-weather improved him so that he was almost
-the Scartoe of old; but the longing for companionship
-was tenfold greater.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On a February morn he lifted up his voice
-to herald the dawn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bow-wow! Ki-yi, yeow-eow-eow-eow-eow.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A joyous bark answered. It was not the
-call of his kind, yet it thrilled him, for in it
-there was a note he knew. He stiffened and
-trembled with expectation. A young collie
-came bounding toward him. She paused
-doubtfully a dozen yards away and growled.
-Scartoe threw up his head, thrust out his tail
-from its usual abject droop and went toward
-her blithely. Then his hair bristled, his
-muscles tightened and he was ready for combat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Behind her came another coyote. He was
-big. Even the veteran, large as he was, appeared
-small in comparison. Where the newcomer
-had picked up the living that had given
-him such weight was a puzzle; but certain it
-was he had ten pounds the better of it. Not
-a thought gave Scartoe to that handicap.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The big wolf wasted no time in preliminaries.
-His strength and skill had been tried in
-mêlées innumerable, and foes had been swept
-before him like chaff. But Scartoe was a
-general. Like lightning he dodged the swift
-rush; like lightning he ripped even as he
-swerved, tearing a piece from his enemy’s neck.
-Coyotes will not grapple and cling with locked
-jaws, as do the brave among dogs; they depend
-on the swift cutting powers of their dexterous
-jaws. Three times they came together; three
-times old Scartoe gashed his antagonist so
-that the blood spurted. Still he could not
-quite reach the throat for the death stroke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then the end came. Too eager in his
-desire to finish the battle, he left himself open
-for the merest flick of time, as he wheeled for
-a fourth onslaught. With one hurtling, upward
-dive, the big brute gained the jugular,
-and Scartoe was thrown back, his throat torn,
-the life ebbing from him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The collie frisked about the victor, playfully
-showing her teeth, and they trotted away together.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An hour after sunup, the ranch-house cook,
-on a quest for his infant son’s collie pet, came
-upon the torn, lifeless body.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Jumping Jupiter!” he exclaimed, prayerfully.
-“It’s ol’ Scartoe.”</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chIII'></a>III<br/> <span class='sub-head'>CORAZÓN</span></h1></div>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';fs:0.9em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>A man is as good as his nerves</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;margin-bottom:0.75em;font-size:0.9em;'>--Cowboy maxim.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>With manes streaming in the wind, a
-band of bronchos fled across the
-grama flats, splashed through the
-San Pedro, and whirled sharply to the right,
-heading for sanctuary in the Dragoons. In
-the lead raced a big sorrel, his coat shimmering
-like polished gold where the sun touched it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s Corazón,” exclaimed Reb. “Head
-him or we’ll lose the bunch.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The pursuers spread out and swept round in
-a wide semicircle. Corazón held to his course,
-a dozen yards in advance of the others, his head
-high. The chase slackened, died away. With
-a blaring neigh, the sorrel eased his furious
-pace and the entire band came to a trot. Before
-them were the mountains, and Corazón
-knew their fastnesses as the street urchin
-knows the alleys that give him refuge; in the
-cañons the bronchos would be safe from man.
-Behind was no sign of the enemy. His nose
-in the wind, he sniffed long, but it bore him
-no taint. Instead, he nickered with delight,
-for he smelled water. They swung to the
-south, and in less than five minutes their hot
-muzzles were washed by the bubbling waters
-of Eternity Spring.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corazón drew in a long breath, expanding
-his well-ribbed sides, and looked up from
-drinking. There in front of him, fifty paces
-away, was a horseman. He snorted the alarm
-and they plunged into a tangle of sagebrush.
-Another rider bore down and turned them
-back. To right and left they darted, then
-wheeled and sought desperately to break
-through the cordon at a weak spot, and failed.
-Wherever they turned, a cowboy appeared as
-by magic. At last Corazón detected an unguarded
-area and flew through it with the speed
-of light.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now we’ve got ’em,” howled Reb. “Don’t
-drive too close, but keep ’em headed for the
-corral.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within a hundred yards of the gate, the sorrel
-halted, his ears cocked in doubt. The cowboys
-closed in to force the band through. Three
-times the bronchos broke and scattered, for to
-their wild instincts the fences and that narrow
-aperture cried treachery and danger. They
-were gathered, with whoops and many imprecations,
-and once more approached the entrance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Drive the saddle bunch out,” commanded
-the range boss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Forth came the remuda of a hundred horses.
-The bronchos shrilled greeting and mingled
-with them, and when the cow-ponies trotted
-meekly into the corral, Corazón and his band
-went too, though they shook and were afraid.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For five years Corazón had roamed the
-range--ever since he had discovered that grass
-was good to eat, and so had left the care of his
-tender-eyed mother. Because he dreaded the
-master of created things and fled him afar,
-only once during that time had he seen man at
-close quarters. That was when, as a youngster,
-he was caught and branded on the left hip.
-He had quickly forgotten that; until now it
-had ceased to be even a memory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But now he and his companion rovers were
-prisoners, cooped in a corral by a contemptible
-trick. They crowded around and around the
-stout enclosure, sometimes dropping to their
-knees in efforts to discover an exit beneath the
-boards. And not twenty feet away, the
-dreaded axis of their circlings, sat a man on a
-horse, and he studied them calmly. Other
-men, astride the fence, were uncoiling ropes,
-and their manner was placid and businesslike.
-One opined dispassionately that “the sorrel is
-shore some horse.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re damn whistlin’,” cried the buster
-over his shoulder, in hearty affirmation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corazón was the most distracted of all the
-band. He was in a frenzy of nervous fear, his
-glossy coat wet and foam-flecked. He would
-not stand still for a second, but prowled about
-the wooden barrier like a jungle creature newly
-prisoned in a cage. Twice he nosed the
-ground and crooked his forelegs in an endeavor
-to slide through the six inches of clear space
-beneath the gate, and the outfit laughed derisively.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here goes,” announced the buster in his
-expressionless tones. “You-all watch out,
-now. Hell’ll be poppin’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At that moment Corazón took it into his
-head to dash at top speed through his friends,
-huddled in a bunch in a corner. A rope
-whined and coiled, and, when he burst out of
-the jam, the noose was around his neck, tightening
-so as to strangle him. Madly he ran
-against it, superb in the sureness of his might.
-Then he squalled with rage and pain and an
-awful terror. His legs flew from under him,
-and poor Corazón was jerked three feet into
-the air, coming down on his side with smashing
-force. The fall shook a grunt out of him,
-and he was stunned and breathless, but unhurt.
-He staggered to his feet, his breath straining
-like a bellows, for the noose cut into his neck
-and he would not yield to its pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Facing him was the man on the bay. His
-mount stood with feet braced, sitting back on
-the rope, and he and his rider were quite collected
-and cool and prepared. The sorrel’s
-eyes were starting from his head; his nostrils
-flared wide, gaping for the air that was denied
-him, and the breath sucked in his throat. It
-seemed as if he must drop. Suddenly the buster
-touched his horse lightly with the spur and
-slackened the rope. With a long sob, Corazón
-drew in a life-giving draught, his gaze fixed
-in frightened appeal on his captor.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Open the gate,” said Mullins, without raising
-his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He flicked the rope over Corazón’s hind
-quarters, and essayed to drive him into the
-next corral, to cut him off from his fellows.
-The sorrel gave a gasp of dismay and lunged
-forward. Again he was lifted from the
-ground, and came down with a thud that left
-him shivering.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“His laig’s done bust!” exclaimed the boss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No; he’s shook up, that’s all. Wait
-awhile.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A moment later Corazón raised his head
-painfully; then, life and courage coming back
-with a rush, he lurched to his feet. Mullins
-waited with unabated patience. The sorrel
-was beginning to respect that which encircled
-his neck and made naught of his strength, and
-when the buster flipped the rope again, he
-ran through the small gate, and brought up
-before he had reached the end of his tether.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two of the cowboys stepped down languidly
-from the fence, and took position in the center
-of the corral.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hi, Corazón! Go it, boy!” they yelled,
-and spurred by their cries, the horse started
-off at a trot. Reb tossed his loop,--flung it
-carelessly, with a sinuous movement of the
-wrist,--and when Corazón had gone a few
-yards, he found his forefeet ensnared. Enraged
-at being thus cramped, he bucked and
-bawled; but, before Reb could settle on the
-rope, he came to a standstill and sank his teeth
-into the strands. Once, twice, thrice he tugged,
-but could make no impression. Then he
-pitched high in air, and--</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“NOW!” shrieked Reb.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They heaved with might and main, and Corazón
-flopped in the dust. Quick as a cat, he
-sprang upright and bolted; but again they
-downed him, and, while Reb held the head by
-straddling the neck, his confederate twined
-dexterously with a stake-rope. There lay Corazón,
-helpless and almost spent, trussed up like
-a sheep for market: they had hog-tied him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the buster who put the hackamore on
-his head. Very deliberately he moved. Corazón
-sensed confidence in the touch of his fingers;
-they spoke a language to him, and he was
-soothed by the sureness of superiority they
-conveyed. He lay quiet. Then Reb incautiously
-shifted his position, and the horse
-heaved and raised his head, banging Mullins
-across the ear. The buster’s senses swam, but
-instead of flying into a rage, he became quieter,
-more deliberate; in his cold eyes was a vengeful
-gleam, and dangerous stealth lurked in his delicate
-manipulation of the strands. An excruciating
-pain shot through the sorrel’s eye:
-Mullins had gouged him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let him up.” It was the buster again,
-atop the bay, making the rope fast with a
-double half-hitch over the horn of the saddle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corazón arose, dazed and very sick. But
-his spirit was unbreakable. Again and again
-he strove to tear loose, rearing, falling back,
-plunging to the end of the rope until he was
-hurled off his legs to the ground. When he
-began to weary, Mullins encouraged him to
-fight, that he might toss him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll learn you what this rope means,” he
-remarked, as the broncho scattered the dust for
-the ninth time, and remained there, completely
-done up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In deadly fear of his slender tether, yet alert
-to match his strength against it once more,
-should opportunity offer, Corazón followed the
-buster quietly enough when he rode out into
-the open. Beside a sturdy mesquite bush that
-grew apart from its brethren, Mullins dismounted
-and tied the sorrel. As a farewell he
-waved his arms and whooped. Of course Corazón
-gathered himself and leaped--leaped to
-the utmost that was in him, so that the bush
-vibrated to its farthest root; and of course he
-hit the earth with a jarring thump that temporarily
-paralyzed him. Mullins departed to
-put the thrall of human will on others.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Throughout the afternoon, and time after
-time during the interminable night, the sorrel
-tried to break away, but with each sickening
-failure he grew more cautious. When he ran
-against the rope now, he did not run blindly to
-its limit, but half wheeled, so that when it
-jerked him back he invariably landed on his
-feet. Corazón was learning hard, but he was
-learning. And what agonies of pain and suspense
-he went through!--for years a free
-rover, and now to be bound thus, by what
-looked to be a mere thread, for he knew not
-what further tortures! He sweated and shivered,
-seeing peril in every shadow. When a
-coyote slunk by with tongue lapping hungrily
-over his teeth, the prisoner almost broke his
-neck in a despairing struggle to win freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the chill of the dawn they led him into
-a circular corral. His sleekness had departed;
-the barrel-like body did not look so well nourished,
-and there was red in the blazing eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon he’ll be mean,” observed the
-buster, as though it concerned him but little.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No-o-o. Go easy with him, Carl, and I
-think he’ll make a good hoss,” the boss cautioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While two men held the rope, Mullins advanced
-along it foot by foot, inch by inch, one
-hand outstretched, and talked to Corazón in
-a low, careless tone of affectionate banter.
-“So you’d like for to kill me, would you?” he
-inquired, grinning. All the while he held the
-sorrel’s gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corazón stood still, legs planted wide apart,
-and permitted him to approach. He trembled
-when the fingers touched his nose; but they
-were firm, confident digits, the voice was reassuring,
-and the gentle rubbing up, up between
-the eyes and ears lulled his forebodings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hand me the blanket,” said Mullins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He drew it softly over Corazón’s back, and
-the broncho swerved, pawed, and kicked with
-beautiful precision. Whereupon they placed
-a rope around his neck, dropped it behind his
-right hind leg, then pulled that member up
-close to his belly; there it was held fast. On
-three legs now, the sorrel was impotent for
-harm. Mullins once more took up the blanket
-but this time the gentleness had flown. He
-slapped it over Corazón’s backbone from side
-to side a dozen times. At each impact the
-horse humped awkwardly, but, finding that he
-came to no hurt, he suffered it in resignation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That much of the second lesson learned, they
-saddled him. Strangely enough, Corazón submitted
-to the operation without fuss, the only
-untoward symptoms being a decided upward
-slant to the back of the saddle and the tucking
-of his tail. Reb waggled his head over this
-exhibition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t like his standing quiet that away;
-it ain’t natural,” he vouchsafed. “Look at
-the crick in his back. Jim-in-ee! he’ll shore
-pitch.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Which he did. The cinches were tightened
-until Corazón’s eyes almost popped from his
-head; then they released the bound leg and
-turned him loose. What was that galling his
-spine? Corazón took a startled peep at it,
-lowered his head between his knees, and began
-to bawl. Into the air he rocketed, his head
-and forelegs swinging to the left, his hind
-quarters weaving to the right. The jar of
-his contact with the ground was appalling.
-Into the air again, his head and forelegs to
-the right, his rump twisted to the left. Round
-and round the corral he went, blatting like an
-angry calf; but the thing on his back stayed
-where it was, gripping his body cruelly. At
-last he was fain to stop for breath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now,” said Mullins, “I reckon I’ll take
-it out of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There has always been for me an overwhelming
-fascination in watching busters at work.
-They have underlying traits in common when
-it comes to handling the horses--the garrulous
-one becomes coldly watchful, the Stoic moves
-with stern patience, the boaster soothes with
-soft-crooned words and confident caress.
-Mullins left Corazón standing in the middle
-of the corral, the hackamore rope strung loose
-on the ground, while he saw to it that his
-spurs were fast. We mounted the fence, not
-wishing to be mixed in the glorious turmoil to
-follow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wouldn’t top ol’ Corazón for fifty,” confessed
-the man on the adjoining post.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mullins has certainly got nerve,” I conceded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A buster has got to have nerve.” The
-range boss delivered himself laconically. “All
-nerve and no brains makes the best. But they
-get stove up and then--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And then? What then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, don’t you know?” he asked in surprise.
-“Every buster loses his nerve at last,
-and then they can’t ride a pack-hoss. It must
-be because it’s one fool man with one set of
-nerves up ag’in a new hoss with a new devil in
-him every time. They wear him down.
-Don’t you reckon?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The explanation sounded plausible. Mullins
-was listening with a faintly amused smile
-to Reb’s account of what a lady mule had done
-to him; he rolled a cigarette and lighted it
-painstakingly. The hands that held the
-match were steady as eternal rock. It was
-maddening to see him stand there so coolly
-while the big sorrel, a dozen feet distant, was
-a-quake with dread, blowing harshly through
-his crimson nostrils whenever a cowboy stirred--and
-each of us knowing that the man was
-taking his life in his hands. An unlooked-for
-twist, a trifling disturbance of poise, and, with
-a horse like Corazón, it meant maiming or
-death. At last he threw the cigarette from
-him and walked slowly to the rope.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So you’re calling for me?” he inquired,
-gathering it up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Corazón was snorting. By patient craft
-Reb acquired a grip on the sorrel’s ears, and,
-while he hung there, bringing the head down
-so that the horse could not move, Mullins
-tested the stirrups and raised himself cautiously
-into the saddle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let him go.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While one could count ten, Corazón stood
-expectant, his back bowed, his tail between
-his legs. The ears were laid flat on the head
-and the forefeet well advanced. The buster
-waited, the quirt hanging from two fingers of
-his right hand. Suddenly the sorrel ducked
-his head and emitted a harsh scream, leaping,
-with legs stiff, straight off the ground. He
-came down with the massive hips at an angle
-to the shoulders, thereby imparting a double
-shock; bounded high again, turned back with
-bewildering speed as he touched the earth;
-and then, in a circle perhaps twenty feet in
-diameter, sprang time after time, his heels
-lashing the air. Never had such pitching been
-seen on the Anvil Range.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I swan, he just misses his tail a’ inch when
-he turns back!” roared a puncher.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mullins sat composedly in the saddle, but
-he was riding as never before. He whipped
-the sorrel at every jump and raked him down
-the body from shoulder to loins with the ripping
-spurs. The brute gave no signs of letting
-up. Through Mullins’ tan of copper hue
-showed a slight pallor. He was exhausted. If
-Corazón did not give in soon, the man would
-be beaten. Just then the horse stopped, feet
-a-sprawl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mullins,”--the range boss got down from
-the fence,--“you’ll kill that hoss. Between
-the cinches belongs to you; the head and hind
-quarters is the company’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a long minute Mullins stared at the
-beast’s ears without replying.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon that’s the rule,” he acquiesced
-heavily. “Do you want that somebody else
-should ride him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No-o-o. Go ahead. But, remember, between
-the cinches you go at him as you like--nowhere
-else.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><a id='leap'></a></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i103.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0005' style='width:85%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'>“<span class='it'>Leaping, with legs stiff, straight off the ground</span>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The buster slapped the quirt down on Corazón’s
-shoulder, but the broncho did not budge;
-then harder. With the first oath he had used,
-he jabbed in the spurs and lay back on the
-hackamore rope. Instead of bucking, Corazón
-reared straight up, his feet pawing like
-the hands of a drowning man. Before Mullins
-could move to step off, the sorrel flung his
-head round and toppled backward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, he’s not dead.” The range boss leaned
-over the buster and his hands fumbled inside
-the shirt. “The horn got him here, but he
-ain’t dead. Claude, saddle Streak and hit for
-Agua Prieta for the doctor.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we had carried the injured man to
-the bunk-house, Reb spoke from troubled
-meditation:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pete, I don’t believe Corazón is as bad as
-he acts with Mullins. I’ve been watching him.
-Mullins, he didn’t--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You take him, then; he’s yours,” snapped
-the boss, his conscience pricking because of the
-reproof he had administered. If the buster
-had ridden him his own way, this might not
-have happened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is how the sorrel came into Reb’s possession.
-Only one man of the outfit witnessed
-the taming, and he would not talk; but
-when Reb came to dinner from the first saddle
-on Corazón, his hands were torn and the nail
-of one finger hung loose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I had to take to the horn and hang on
-some,” he admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ay, he had clung there desperately while
-the broncho pitched about the river-bed, whither
-Reb had retired for safety and to escape spectators.
-But at the next saddle Corazón was
-less violent; at the third, recovering from the
-stunning shocks and bruisings of the first day,
-he was a fiend; and then, on the following
-morning, he did not pitch at all. Reb rode
-him every day to sap the superfluous vigor in
-Corazón’s iron frame and he taught him as
-well as he could the first duties of a cowhorse.
-Finding that his new master never
-punished him unless he undertook to dispute his
-authority, the sorrel grew tractable and began
-to take an interest in his tasks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s done broke,” announced Reb; “I’ll
-have him bridle-wise in a week. He’ll make
-some roping horse. Did you see him this evening?
-I swan--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They scoffed good-naturedly; but Reb proceeded
-on the assumption that Corazón was
-meant to be a roping horse, and schooled him
-accordingly. As for the sorrel, he took to
-the new pastime with delight. Within a
-month nothing gave him keener joy than to
-swerve and crouch at the climax of a sprint
-and see a cow thrown heels over head at the
-end of the rope that was wrapped about his
-saddle-horn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The necessity of contriving to get three
-meals a day took me elsewhere, and I did not
-see Corazón again for three years. Then, one
-Sunday afternoon, Big John drew me from El
-Paso to Juarez on the pretense of seeing a
-grand, an extraordinary, a most noble bull-fight,
-in which the dauntless Favorita would
-slay three fierce bulls from the renowned El
-Carmen ranch, in “competency” with the fearless
-Morenito Chico de San Bernardo; and a
-youth with a megaphone drew us both to a
-steer-roping contest instead. We agreed that
-bull-fighting was brutal on the Sabbath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll bet it’s rotten,” remarked Big John
-pessimistically, as we took our seats. “I could
-beat ’em myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he scanned the list, his face brightened.
-Among the seventeen ropers thereon were two
-champions and a possible new one in Raphael
-Fraustro, the redoubtable vaquero from the
-domain of Terrazas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And here’s Reb!” roared John--he is accustomed
-to converse in the tumult of the
-branding-pen--“I swan, he’s entered from
-Monument.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shortly afterwards the contestants paraded,
-wonderfully arrayed in silk shirts and new
-handkerchiefs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some of them ain’t been clean before in a
-year,” was John’s caustic comment. “There’s
-Slim; I KNOW he hasn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were a fine-looking body of men, and
-two of my neighbors complained that I
-trampled on their feet. The horses caught the
-infection of excitement from the packed stands
-and champed on their bits and caracoled
-and waltzed sideways in a manner highly unbecoming
-a staid cow-pony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was one that did not. So sluggish
-was his gait and general bearing, in contrast
-to the others, that the crowd burst into laughter.
-He plodded at the tail-end of the procession,
-his hoofs kicking up the dust in listless
-spurts, his nose on a level with his knees.
-I rubbed my eyes and John said, “No, it
-ain’t--it can’t be--”; but it was. Into that
-arena slouched Corazón, entered against the
-pick of the horses of the Southwest; and Reb
-was astride him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We watched the ropers catch and tie the
-steers in rapid succession, but the much-heralded
-ones missed altogether, and to John and me
-the performance lagged. We were waiting
-for Reb and Corazón.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They came at last, at the end of the list.
-When Corazón ambled up the arena to enter
-behind the barrier, the grandstand roared a
-facetious welcome; the spectacle of this sad-gaited
-nag preparing to capture a steer
-touched its risibilities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Listen to me,” bawled a fat gentleman in
-a wide-brimmed hat, close to my ear. “You
-listen to me! They’re all fools. That’s a
-cowhorse. No blasted nonsense. Knows his
-business, huh? You’re damn whistlin’!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Assuredly, Corazón knew his business. The
-instant he stepped behind the line he was a
-changed horse. The flopping ears pricked forward,
-his neck arched, and the great muscles
-of his shoulders and thighs rippled to his dainty
-prancing. He pulled and fretted on the bit,
-his eyes roving about in search of the quarry;
-he whinnied an appeal to be gone. Reb made
-ready his coil, curbing him with light pressure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Out from the chute sprang a steer, heading
-straight down the arena. Corazón was frantic.
-With the flash of the gun he breasted
-the barrier-rope and swept down on him in
-twenty strides. Reb stood high in the stirrups;
-the loop whirled and sped; and, without
-waiting to see how it fell, but accepting a
-catch in blind faith, the sorrel started off at a
-tangent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Big John was standing up in his place, clawing
-insanely at the hats of his neighbors and
-banging them on the head with his programme.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Look at him--just look at him!” he
-shrieked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The steer was tossed clear of the ground and
-came down on his left side. Almost before he
-landed, Reb was out of the saddle and speeding
-toward him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s getting up. HE’S GETTING
-UP. Go to him, Reb!” howled John and I.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The steer managed to lift his head; he was
-struggling to his knees. I looked away, for
-Reb must lose. Then a hoarse shout from the
-multitude turned back my gaze. Corazón had
-felt the slack on the rope and knew what it
-meant. He dug his feet into the dirt and began
-to walk slowly forward--very slowly and
-carefully, for Reb’s task must not be spoiled.
-The steer collapsed, falling prone again, but
-the sorrel did not stop. Once he cocked his
-eye, and seeing that the animal still squirmed,
-pulled with all his strength. The stands were
-rocking; they were a sea of tossing hats and
-gesticulating arms and flushed faces; the roar
-of their plaudits echoed back from the hills.
-And it was all for Corazón, gallant Corazón.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dam’ his eyes--dam’ his ol’ eyes!” Big
-John babbled over and over, absolutely oblivious.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Reb stooped beside the steer, his hands looping
-and tying with deft darting twists even as
-he kept pace with his dragged victim.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I guess it’s--about--a--hour,” he panted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he sprang clear and tossed his hands
-upward, facing the judges’ stand. After that
-he walked aimlessly about, mopping his face
-with a handkerchief; for to him the shoutings
-and the shifting colors were all a foolish dream,
-and he was rather sick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Right on the cry with which his master announced
-his task done, Corazón eased up on
-the rope and waited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Pee-ler’s time,” bellowed the man with
-the megaphone presently, “is twenty-one seconds,
-ty-ing the world’s re-cord.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So weak that his knees trembled, Reb
-walked over to his horse. “Corazón,” he said
-huskily, and slapped him once on the flank.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nothing would do the joyous crowd then
-but that Reb should ride forth to be acclaimed
-the victor. We sat back and yelled ourselves
-weak with laughter, for Corazón, having done
-his work, refused resolutely to squander time
-in vain parade. The steer captured and tied,
-he had no further interest in the proceedings.
-The rascal dog-trotted reluctantly to the center
-of the arena in obedience to Reb, then
-faced the audience; but, all the time Reb was
-bowing his acknowledgments, Corazón sulked
-and slouched, and he was sulking and shuffling
-the dust when they went through the gate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now,” said John, who is very human,
-“we’ll go help Reb spend that money.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we jostled amid the outgoing crowd, several
-cowboys came alongside the grandstand
-rail, and Big John drew me aside to have
-speech with them. One rider led a spare horse
-and when he passed a man on foot, the latter
-hailed him:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Say, Ed, give me a lift to the hotel?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sure,” answered Ed, proffering the reins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The man gathered them up, his hands fluttering
-as if with palsy, and paused with his
-foot raised toward the stirrup.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He won’t pitch nor nothing, Ed?” came
-the quavered inquiry. “You’re shore he’s
-gentle?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gentler’n a dog,” returned Ed, greatly surprised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You ain’t fooling me, now, are you, Ed?”
-continued the man on the ground. “He
-looks kind of mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Give him to me!” Ed exploded. “You kin
-walk.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From where we stood, only the man’s back
-was visible. “Who is that fellow?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who? Him?” answered my neighbor.
-“Oh, his name’s Mullins. They say he used
-to be able to ride anything with hair on it,
-and throw off the bridle at that. I expect
-that’s just talk. Don’t you reckon?”</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chIV'></a>IV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE OUTLAW</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Steve was recounting an episode of
-Hell’s Acre.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And jist as I was fighting my horse
-to make him go through that scrub-oak, he
-done stubbed his toe in the sand. Up she come
-with a whoof--one of them ol’ long-horns.
-That cow had hid herself there. Yes, sir; but
-she didn’t quite git her horns covered.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Reb said he could well believe it. No longer
-ago than last Tuesday, while chasing some
-stubborn cattle, he had chanced upon a cow
-lying flat behind a bush. A jackrabbit was
-burying her under leaves, for better concealment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whereupon the two got to horse and rode
-away, leaving behind them a thoughtful silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a water-gap to be repaired and
-they headed for the Salt Fork of the Brazos.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wait a minute,” said Steve. “Look there.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A cow stood on the crest of a rise--a lean,
-dun creature, with distended eyes. When
-they approached, she trotted off to the right,
-mumbling anxiously. They did not follow.
-Then she stopped, her head erect and nostrils
-dilated, to watch them. The two ambled forward
-and she kept near, very, very anxious.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s got a calf hid out somewheres,” Reb
-remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He surveyed the immediate country leisurely,
-confident of what he would discover.
-Two hundred yards in front was a patch of
-mesquite, and they made for it. Behind a bush
-they found the calf--a sturdy, red-and-white
-baby with a specially black, moist nose. It
-flattened out when Steve stood over it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Git up,” he commanded, “I want to see
-more of you. I bet them hoofs of yours is
-soft.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The calf hugged the ground. He raised
-the sagging body by the brisket and tail, none
-too gently. When he let go, the little fellow
-collapsed, spread out like a jellyfish. He must
-have marveled as he lay there, rolling his wide,
-questioning eyes upward, what strange beings
-these were, for he was just one day old and
-had never seen a man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come a li’l’ seven,” Steve cried joyously.
-“Look a-here, Reb. See his face.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Between the youngster’s eyes was a crimson
-splash which made a perfect 7. Reb examined
-the peculiar marking with interest and
-suggested that Come-a-Seven might bring the
-little devil luck as a name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The calf resented all this handling and raised
-his voice in a plaintive bawl. As they loped
-away on their errand, the cow crashed through
-the bushes to her offspring’s side. She nosed
-him solicitously, rumbling caresses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Come-a-Seven inherited all the hardiness of
-his race--indeed, in later years, Reb vowed
-that he was tougher’n the oldest man in the
-world. Half an hour after his advent into
-this vale of tears he could walk. It was not a
-gait to justify boasting, because his forelegs
-showed a tendency to give at unexpected
-places, but he saved himself from a fall by
-leaning against his mother’s shoulder. He
-next made the circuit of the cow twice in a
-clumsy hunt for the fount of his food supply
-and finally reached it in an extremely awkward
-position. Nevertheless, she watched him pridefully,
-her sight blurred with happiness; and
-braced against her hind leg, he fed like a glutton.
-Feeling full and reckless therefrom, he
-humped his back in abandon and tried to
-cavort, but came down with a jarring thump.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The young mother did her duty by him like
-a Scotch washerwoman with nine children.
-He breakfasted at dawn--drank until he could
-drink no more. Afterwards she went off to
-graze, leaving the calf behind some screening
-hush. It was seldom she strayed so far that
-she was not within sight or call: there is danger
-to toddling calves that lie out on the range unprotected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How fast his strength grew! At five days
-of age he could have butted into a wooden
-fence at half-speed without any especially ill
-effects, save to the fence. Yet his mother’s
-care never abated. She would go over him
-every night with eager tenderness and was
-ever aggressively on the alert to defend. For
-she would have fought anything on four legs
-for the life of that loose-jointed, red-and-white
-blatherskite she held to be prince of his race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cattle grazed in scattered bunches over
-some hundred thousand acres of the east range--they
-are not so companionable as horses and
-do not herd so closely in their feeding. Nor
-will the bulls take such responsibilities upon
-their shoulders as do stallions with the mares and
-colts. Come-a-Seven, in fact, never saw his
-father, to his knowledge. That ponderous,
-morose scion of Hereford stock lived his own
-life in his own way, spending half the day
-sleeping in the shade of a cottonwood; and he
-did not worry about family matters. His
-scores of children might fare as best they could.
-In the meantime he had his amusements. Besides,
-what on earth were their mothers for?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On his eighth day Come-a-Seven started out
-to see something of the world. No great
-variety offered within his ken--a rolling expanse,
-green-gray, gashed by numerous brick-red
-gullies; hundreds of scraggy mesquite
-bushes and some prickly-pear; two or three
-regal cottonwoods on the bank of a creek,
-whose sandy bed was a third of a mile wide;
-beyond, a butte lifting from the earth like a
-monstrous mushroom. That was what he saw--that,
-and big blue blotches of shadows moving
-over the country like an army of specters.
-Piles of tumbled white clouds gave promise of
-rain at a later date.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Upon this the red-and-white gazed, his head
-moving from side to side in jerks, ears twitching,
-tail straight out as when he fed. He was
-trying to get up nerve to sally farther afield.
-As a starter and a spur to courage he curveted
-clumsily, but was brought up short by the sight
-of another calf of about his own age, standing
-not a dozen yards away, surveying him with
-the liveliest interest. Come-a-Seven tried to
-look hostile, even threatening, but his curiosity
-got the better of him, because the calf into
-whose face he glared had the merest stump of
-a tail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Advancing a step, he intimated in his own
-peculiar, gruff calf-manner that the abbreviated
-member puzzled him. If Come-a-Seven
-had ever dodged a coyote, he would not have
-been so ignorant. The other evinced no resentment
-and they approached in amicable
-fashion, made a playful butt at each other and
-became fast friends. After that they would
-loaf about together in the hot summer days,
-making trouble for the other calves and stirring
-up bickerings and feuds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>None of them was of a serious nature. The
-nearest approach to a tragic ending happened
-when the red-and-white smashed, full tilt, into
-a six-months’-old half-brother, of whose relationship
-he was ignorant--not that this would
-have made any difference--and knocked him
-off the steep wall of a tank into the water.
-He had to run at that, for the other was a
-husky, ardent calf, and he was angry all
-through. When he scrambled out, he went
-hunting for the red-and-white, but by that time
-the offender was safely under his mother’s eye,
-which fact he flaunted brazenly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Who ever saw a braver pair? Who so bold
-as the tailless one and Come-a-Seven when
-there was no possibility of danger? Then, at
-the first hint of trouble, up would go their
-tails and they would run to their mothers at
-their very best pace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They were learning, too, for many things
-they saw carried lessons to their youthful perceptions.
-They were witnesses of the finish
-of a wild-cat, which a puncher roped out of a
-tree under which they had been taking a nap.
-They saw a companion die slowly from blackleg,
-and another practically eaten alive by the
-fearful screw-worm. For days, too, they
-avoided an old cow whose head was swelled to
-twice its natural size. The poor creature was
-the victim of a snake bite, but she survived.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk101'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ow-oo-yah! Ow-oo-yah! Ow-oo-yah!
-Ki-yi! Git up, cattle.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A shrill whistle brought the red-and-white to
-his feet with a jerk just as the sun tinted the
-eastern sky to gray and gold and rose. He
-bellowed an inquiry to his mother, and for a
-second stood irresolute. A horseman came
-riding at top speed straight for them, hallooing
-with all his might and waving his hat.
-Whereupon the calf waited for no instructions.
-He let himself out for all he was worth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The puncher rode at a hand-gallop behind
-and he did not drive too hard. Instead, he
-gave them a shove in the direction he desired
-they should travel, and, with a final shout,
-swung away to the right, where a bunch of six
-rose up with a snort and gave him a chase.
-He calculated that the cow would keep going
-and she did. Her slow march was marked by
-protests from her hopeful offspring. Observing
-that the rider was busy stirring up
-cattle in many directions, his baby mind could
-conceive of no good reason for plugging along
-in a line dead ahead because this individual had
-furnished the impetus for the start. So he
-grumbled much, but trotted along obediently,
-notwithstanding; and presently his own grievances
-were dissipated by the contemplation of
-what was happening around him. Every
-patch of brush in the country appeared to be
-turning out cows, calves and young steers, as
-a magician’s bag scatters paper roses. In
-several bunches he recognized acquaintances,
-but they were too concerned about the future
-to do more than give a hurried squall of recognition.
-An enormous procession was under
-way and they were marching in it, a part of it.
-Whither would it lead them?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Apparently this speculation was likewise a
-source of worry to the cows and steers, though
-they all had been through much the same before.
-Yet, for the most part, they went
-soberly, falling into the semblance of a trail-herd
-as their ranks were swelled by others which
-the cowboys roused up; but there were some
-that did not. Occasionally a heifer would
-make a break to one side, only to be headed
-off; and once a cow, driven too impetuously,
-jerked her head sideways and bowed her tail.
-She was “on the prod,” and they let her go.
-Time after time, when the red-and-white would
-turn about to gaze, a rider would come at him,
-slapping his boot with his quirt and whistling.
-This constant surveillance irritated Come-a-Seven.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their ranks were swelling so fast, too, that
-his identity, and hence his sense of security,
-was lost. Another influx of cattle caused him
-to carom off his mother’s side and in puerile
-anger he butted at those nearest, until he observed
-he was making no impression, when, discouraged,
-he gave it up and moved along.
-His tiny troubles were submerged in that
-great army. Two thousand cattle were converging
-upon a plain, from nine points in an
-area five miles wide.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Come-a-Seven was almost too interested to
-be scared.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Clouds of dust welling up; a babel of sound;
-mighty roarings of irate bulls, petty monarchs
-now on a common footing they resented; the
-lowing of cows and the frightened bawling of
-the calves; and always a bewildering churning
-and shifting like a maelstrom. Every few
-minutes a stream of dirt would shoot skyward
-like a geyser, where a bull was spoiling for a
-fight and sent his thundering challenge over
-the ranks. Occasionally there was a clash and
-some desperate attempts at goring. Holding
-this host on the round-up ground was a
-cordon of eight punchers, sitting apathetically
-on their horses. They had little to do while
-their companions worked the herd, cutting out
-the cows and calves to one side, the strays and
-beef cattle to another. Sometimes an animal
-would wander to the edge, stand staring uncertainly,
-then saunter forth to attain the open;
-but most were driven back without trouble.
-One persisted and gave a herder a furious dash
-to head him off; but that was all part of the
-day’s work.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the cutters penetrated the dust and
-came threading their way through the noisy,
-restless horde, the calf became doubly uneasy.
-A man on a blazed-face bay was particularly
-insistent. Come-a-Seven watched him work
-deviously through the entire herd after a cow
-and her young, and drive them forth to the
-open; so he tried to keep out of sight. But it
-was no use. Soon the horse was close to them,
-and mother and son felt, rather than saw, that
-they were the objects of the quiet maneuvering
-that followed. Wherever they dodged and
-doubled the blazed-face was sure to be there,
-close behind, patient, untiring. A wave of resentment
-against this steady pressure broke
-them into a run, and, before they knew it, the
-outer rim of cattle split wide open and they
-were beyond the herd. In a panic they endeavored
-to dart back, but the big bay interposed.
-Seeing this, the cow sped toward a
-draw where the scrub-cedar appeared to offer
-chances of escape. With the speed of light
-the puncher was after them, twisting, wheeling,
-heading her off toward the cut-bunch.
-And the calf found the same indefatigable foe
-between him and freedom when he emulated
-his mother.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Git in, you low-lived whelp,” howled the
-cutter, and he spurred furiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They finally gave up the contest as hopeless
-and trotted meekly to join the bunch of cattle
-they perceived ahead of them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were cows which shot from the herd
-at a gallop and then would break to a hesitating
-trot, their heads nodding loosely close
-to the ground. Their gait had an odd uncertainty
-about it. The animals would shrink
-from a weed and draw back. One stopped at
-perceiving a shadow and went around it fearfully.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Locoed,” a puncher commented. For
-these had eaten of the strange loco weed and
-were afflicted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By ten o’clock, the herd was worked. Fires
-were lighted and the branding irons thrust into
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The roper and flankers got into action, two
-sets of them, and every minute calves emitted
-protesting wails as the hot irons seared their
-sides. He worked like an automaton, that
-roper. He seemed removed from human passions,
-remote from the ordinary human impulses.
-His loop dropped unerringly, and
-back the horse would go at a trot or a lope,
-with a panic-stricken, crying calf plunging,
-bumping along in rear, sometimes turning
-somersaults--for life is too short to carry calves
-to the flankers with solicitous care, though
-possibly the flankers would prefer them that
-way.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The red-and-white edged away from the
-field of this gentleman’s labors and ran
-straight in front of a sorrel horse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Baw-aw-aw-aw-aw-aw! he cried, as something
-settled about his neck and a resistless
-force commenced to drag him into the open.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another roper had snared him. He humped
-his back and began to buck, his legs rigid. At
-every leap into the air he blatted and protested.
-His mother shrank back in confusion
-at the first outcry and lost sight of him in the
-dust raised by his unwilling progress. For
-fully thirty yards he was dragged in a series
-of hurtling leaps, with the rope cutting into
-his neck so that he could scarcely breathe; and
-then, before he had time to recover his faculties,
-a man seized the rope, ran along it until
-he reached the red-and-white, and reaching
-over his body, flopped him in the air. But
-the calf was not flanked so easily--not Come-a-Seven.
-Twice he rebounded like a rubber ball,
-finding his feet before his antagonist could
-fall on him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stay-ay-ay with him, Steve! Go to him,
-boy!” shrieked the delighted flankers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Durn his hide. He’s stout as a weaner,”
-Steve snorted; and he gave a tremendous
-heave. At the same time he made a short
-spring forward with knees crooked, which carried
-him under the calf as that strenuous combatant
-tried to make his hoofs hit the ground
-first. The red-and-white came down with a
-bump that sounded like the unloading of a
-trunk marked, “Handle with care.” It would
-have broken the ribs of anything aged three
-months except a calf.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Holy cats, it’s Come-a-Seven,” Steve
-panted. He sat back of his head, with a knee
-on the neck, and twisted one foreleg in a jiu-jitsu
-grip that paralyzed all effort. Another
-puncher at his other extremity got a vise-like
-hold of the left leg and put the other out of
-commission by thrusting it far forward with
-his foot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Oh-oh-oh-uh-uh-uh-ah!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cry was almost human, and the eyes
-bulged and rolled with terror until the whites
-showed. The iron had touched him, biting
-through his coat into the flesh, while the smoke
-curled up with smell of burning hair. His
-fright needed just that pang to get proper
-vocal expression, and he used all his available
-breath in a frantic appeal to the mother that
-bore him. It was not in vain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Look out! Here she comes!” yelled a
-flanker.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The three working over the calf looked up
-to see the cow trotting toward them. There was
-no time to dodge. When she was within ten
-feet of the group an idle flanker kicked a jet
-of sand into her face and she swerved irresolutely,
-coming to a walk. The roper drove her
-back and work was resumed on her son.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I mind once, when I was with the Spur, a
-cow jumped clean over us that-a-way,” remarked
-Bill Kennedy, rising from the ground.
-As a parting salute he rolled the red-and-white
-over his hip, as a wrestler throws a man to the
-mat. “Say, Jake, heel them big fellers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The calf was scared, and sore all over. A
-swallow-fork in the right ear and a crop in the
-left worried him. He stood glowering in all
-directions, in an effort to get his bearings;
-then he executed some shuddering, half-hearted
-jumps, as though trying to shed the
-two burning letters on his left flank, and
-sought his mother. He was sick, and all the
-fight gone from him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The herd was driven off and released, and
-the red-and-white went with them. He tarried
-in a draw, enduring great pain. A fever
-burned him, too, and he was low in spirits.
-Half of his enormous appetite was gone, but
-only half. Alas, he had lost the source of supply
-for even the remnant that remained. In
-the general confusion he had become separated
-from his mother, and, as it was meal-time, the
-loss was doubly distressing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He lifted up his voice in a song of sorrow, but
-naught availed. Perceiving this, he started
-to find her. The cow was hunting for him,
-too, hunting frenziedly. And she was not
-alone in her grief, for at least a dozen cows had
-lost their young in the turmoil of branding,
-and they wandered up and down and across
-without cessation, lowing pathetically, a world
-of distress in their tones and in their eyes.
-From time to time one would sight a stray calf
-and make a bee line for it, but only to give a
-moan of disappointment and resume her hunt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Come-a-Seven tried to establish filial relations
-with every cow he met. As a result, he
-got some rebuffs that would have discouraged
-a less hungry youngster. For hours he
-searched; for hours cows wandered about crying
-for their young. Twice the red-and-white
-essayed to feed where he had no blood-rights
-and nearly had his ribs stove in for his pains.
-Finally, made crafty by hunger, he softly
-shouldered another calf away from her place at
-the mother’s side and tried to substitute. The
-old cow properly kicked him for that trick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But his hunger was short-lived; a familiar
-voice smote upon his ear, his answering cry
-came with a glad quiver in it, and mother and
-son were reunited. How she smelled of him
-and licked his dusty sides and neck! And
-the way he went for his meal! She gave a
-deep rumble of content. Even when Come-a-Seven
-butted cruelly with his head, in his
-consuming hunger, and hurt her, she lowed in
-proud satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Pain and trouble cannot last forever. In
-a week his wounds had healed; he was sound
-and strong again. Once more began the long,
-idle days of good feeding and play with his
-young companions. His life was a full one.
-Compared with that of the barnyard variety of
-the genus calf, it was as checkered as a drummer’s
-appears to a hot-blooded resident of a
-country town.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the winter his mother grew gaunt. The
-cold was intense at times, and the snowfall was
-greater than the oldest bull could recall. At
-rare intervals men came riding to inspect and
-on one visit drove some of the weaker cattle to
-the home pasture, there to be fed daily. For
-the others little could be done, and the red-and-white
-was one of them. There were many
-good windbreaks on the range and the calf was
-tough, so he won through somehow, though once
-when the snow drifted deep and the cow could
-not find grass in her wanderings, grim death
-stared them in the face. The calf himself
-went three days without a meal, yet lived. A
-cow will not paw down through the snow like
-a horse, and mother and son saw some of their
-friends perish.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Spring came at last--suddenly, like a mountain
-sunrise--and the earth was exceeding glad.
-Worried and emaciated, they greeted the season
-of hope with a sudden access of energy.
-In later months the red-and-white was weaned.
-He learned to eat grass, of which accomplishment
-he was at first inordinately proud, and
-he throve on it; and he had but one worry in
-the world--heel flies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It has been said that Come-a-Seven was
-lusty. He was an amazing big fellow for his
-age. When round-up time arrived again and
-he was herded with about fourteen hundred
-cattle, he grew chesty over the fact that he
-sized up well with most of the two-year-olds.
-His strength and restless energy were proportionate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Indeed, Come-a-Seven bade fair to be a
-rounder. While the other cattle would be
-sleeping peacefully on the bed-ground, the
-young red-and-white would go up and down
-through the herd, trying to start some excitement.
-He always chose to walk straight
-through the center of the recumbent host, and
-where he passed all got to their feet uneasily.
-The tired old cows would grumble at him and
-tell him to go to bed, but he was proof against
-all reproaches and conscience he had none.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Damn him,” grumbled a puncher on guard
-as he watched his wanderings for the twentieth
-time, and for the twentieth time turned
-and drove back some who tried to walk out at
-his prompting. “He’s playing for a stompede.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I swan if it ain’t Come-a-Seven!” remarked
-Steve, when the red-and-white passed very near
-him. “Git to bed, Come-a-Seven. I reckon
-you’re a rake.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When tired of his solitary roaming, the red-and-white
-would select some young steer
-weaker than himself, butt him off the bed he
-had warmed, and compose himself to slumber.
-Whereat a great sigh of satisfaction would be
-heard mingled with the blowing of the cattle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another year passed. When the cowboys
-came whooping up the cattle in the following
-August, the red-and-white heard the loud
-shoutings and saw, with contemptuous resentment,
-his fellow-creatures being propelled toward
-the round-up ground. Their meekness
-awoke hot rebellion in him. Big he was now
-and of the strength of two. He decided he
-would not go.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A rider caught him unawares and the surprise
-of his first rush started the steer in the
-right direction, but it failed to keep him
-there; for as soon as the man departed to drive
-another bunch, the red-and-white went off at
-a tangent. Far had he wandered in his day,
-and he knew some brakes--miles, miles away--where
-the foot of horse seldom trod. Toward
-these he headed. Two hundred, three
-hundred yards, and behind him he heard the
-familiar scramble of the pursuer. The red-and-white
-flagged his tail and let out another
-notch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Quit it, you Come-a-Seven!” Steve bawled.
-“Blast you, git in there.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The two-year-old only ran the harder, but
-the pony gained. Then he lost his temper and
-made up his mind that whether or not the cowboy
-overtook him he would reach those brakes;
-if necessary he would turn about and attack.
-His head swayed from side to side, his gait became
-uncertain and he seemed worried--symptoms
-which were not lost on Steve. When
-the steer stopped and faced about, the horse
-turned like a flash, and as he did so a loud,
-querulous voice, raised in helpless anger, broke
-up Steve’s programme. That voice changed
-the red-and-white’s destiny. Indirectly it
-saved him from the stockyards; but, then, he
-would probably have saved himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let him go, Steve! You’ll lose that other
-bunch,” the wagon boss cried. “We’ll get him
-again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Steve waved his hat at the steer with a good-natured
-grin and shook up his horse, departing
-like a rocket to his work. The red-and-white
-continued on toward the brakes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That is how he became an outlaw.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the vast Croton brakes were scores such
-as he. Some of them were grown old and
-hoary, and they bore many brands. A few
-had no brands. All had run wild for years,
-and round-ups were things of the long ago.
-So shy were they that it was as difficult for a
-man to approach them as to stalk a herd of
-antelope. They kept in bands of five and six,
-and did anything come near which one did not
-understand, they were off like deer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The red-and-white took to the life as his birth-right.
-Somewhere in him ran a strain that
-drove resistlessly to solitude and the wilds;
-and he was happy. More than once he had to
-fight, but he possessed an unbeatable temper
-and had a world of craft to direct his agility
-and colossal strength, so that he came from his
-battles with blood-dripping horns held high and
-proudly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rough and torn and forbidding were the
-brakes--miles on miles of red-walled cañons,
-of scrub cedar and sand-rock--but the feeding
-was good for so few when one knew the
-best places, and the outlaw waxed ever
-stronger. His horns spread, too.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Five years sped by and the outlaw fought his
-way to kingship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On a December day he was startled by the
-noise of firing. Such sounds he had never
-heard. It was not the snappy, sharp report of
-the six-shooter, but louder and of heavier
-metal. Suddenly fear took hold of him.
-There was a hunt on--a hunt of outlaws. The
-horns of the free steers would bring high
-prices, and once in a generation a party of
-punchers came thus with rifles to gather them.
-Come-a-Seven let out a bellow and tore away
-at the head of his followers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a terrible day for the outlaws of the
-Croton brakes. When the bunch that trailed
-behind the red-and-white split and scattered,
-the chase developed into mad, individual contests
-of speed. The outlaw could run; the way
-Come-a-Seven traveled would have made an
-ordinary range steer look like a muley cow.
-Up and down sheer bluffs that appeared too
-steep to climb, he ran; and cliffs seemed to
-be highways to him. But, behind, a rider
-spurred tenaciously, steadily diminishing the
-distance that separated them, holding his fire
-until he could be sure of this glorious prize.
-Up came the rifle--but it never sent forth its
-leaden messenger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Gee whiz, if it ain’t ol’ Come-a-Seven!”
-cried Steve. “Git a-going, boy, and keep her
-up! Whoopee!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a final spurt and shout the veteran
-puncher wheeled and came to a standstill, regarding
-the smashing run of the big steer with
-a smile of admiration. The red-and-white
-was already disappearing in the distance, far,
-far away from all further danger of pursuit,
-his tail held high, his head swaying. Steve
-watched him until he topped a rise and disappeared.
-He had lost a goodly prize; but he
-was content. He chuckled as he recalled the
-steer’s past misdeeds on the bed-ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The outlaw went back to his remotest fastnesses.
-He may be there yet, boss of the Croton
-brakes.</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chV'></a>V<br/> <span class='sub-head'>SHIELA</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A panther’s scream split the whine
-of the wind and Shiela reared herself
-in front of the fire, her body retched
-by an answering challenge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shee-la,” her master rebuked. “Lie down,
-girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wolfhound sank to the floor with a reluctant
-flop, but the hairs on her neck and
-along her spine bristled still. She continued
-to rumble.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were four men playing at cards in
-the bunkhouse. Cold weather had set in and
-the Tumbling H outfit were eating out their
-hearts in winter camps. Here at headquarters,
-the range boss, wagon boss, blacksmith and
-cook played half the day at seven-up and
-pitch; and listened to Mit’s varying accounts
-of high life in the East, as he had plumbed it
-in Fort Worth; and raved at the climate and
-cursed petty annoyances with the savage irritability
-of full-blooded men lacking enough to
-do.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hark to that ol’ wind,” mourned the wagon
-boss--he was fifty and considered fourteen
-hours a day in the saddle mere child’s play--“It
-was sixty-six above this morning, and now
-it’s zero. No wonder a man cain’t be healthy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The others nodded gravely and the cook
-shuffled the cards.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a wonder, Steve,” he observed, “that
-you don’t--my deal?--you don’t try that dog
-in wolf huntin’. Not by herself, but with a
-bunch of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wait till she’s used to the country and has
-got her growth. Then you’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mit remarked that he referred, of course, to
-the hunting of coyotes, which prompted a
-passionate declaration from the wagon boss
-that the range ought to be cleared of these
-pests. They killed too many calves in bad
-years: poison ’em, he urged. Nobody opposed
-objection and they went on with the game.
-Then from the mouth of the cañon came to the
-ears of the players the vibrant cry of the lobo.
-Right upon it broke Shiela’s roar of defiance,
-and the beast was at the door in a bound,
-whimpering frenziedly, her terrible teeth
-bared. Beside her, his head three inches short
-of Shiela’s breast, Friday stiffened in sympathetic
-rage, his stubby tail wagging. He
-raised a shrill treble bark.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Down, Shee-la! Down, girl.” Running
-from the table, O’Donnell led her back to the
-fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Friday, you come here,” the blacksmith
-cried. “Lay down under the table, and don’t
-you go for to move!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not to cattle-browsed stretches of prairie
-land had Shiela been reared, nor to vast sweep
-of hills and mesquite-flecked valleys, and of
-torn, brick-red sandstone and tortuous, dry
-river-beds. She was a stranger in a strange
-land, and her new kingdom struck to the roots
-of her nature. Far as she could wander in a
-frivolous all-day rabbit hunt with Friday was
-no sign of human habitation; and beyond that,
-away to the pale-blue line that must surely be
-the rim of all things,--full sixty miles,--no
-handiwork of man was visible. Here was an
-unspoiled empire, and her master was the autocrat.
-For the first time in her life the wolfhound
-drew the breath of unrestrained liberty,
-chafed hotly to the tang of the air, cast about
-and trailed wild creatures whose taint stirred
-her to mad longings for the chase and a fight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How can one tell of Shiela’s beauty? A
-great animal and a wonderful--light fawn in
-color, with a shaggy coat. Her eyes were in
-general gentle and melting. But it must be
-confessed that her proportions did not fit
-Shiela to be a comfort about the home, for she
-weighed a hundred and eighteen pounds and
-could not go under the tallest table without
-stooping. As she always forgot to stoop, her
-progress was fraught with excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the day following her arrival, the cook
-scrambled out of bed long before sunup to ascertain
-what manner of idiot could be knocking
-on the door in this deserted region. Man
-alive, why couldn’t they walk in? Shiela
-leaped on him to be fondled--the wolfhound
-had been wagging her tail against the door as
-she lay across the threshold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ef I was you,” Mit suggested civilly, “I’d
-lay out on the range where you’d have room to
-move round. Git a nice big butte all to yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her heart and her courage were big as her
-body. Following O’Donnell on a day when he
-fared to Stinking Water, quite by accident she
-roused up a loafer in the cañon. Shiela flew
-in pursuit, deaf to O’Donnell’s frantic commands
-to come back. And when the wolf
-turned fiercely at bay to pit her might against
-this daring hunter, a hundred and eighteen
-pounds of dauntless pluck launched itself at
-her neck like a bolt from a storm-cloud.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s a dead one now,” O’Donnell groaned,
-circling for a shot. “She’s a goner, sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Had the wolfhound been more wary, she
-would have fared better. She could not have
-slain her foe; the dog does not breathe that
-can go to the death-grapple with a loafer wolf
-in the flush of his strength; and Shiela knew
-neither the amazing quickness of the wild, nor
-how to guard against those slashing counter-attacks.
-The lobo could dodge and rip simultaneously,
-using her jaws from any direction.
-Even when bowled over by the hound’s unreckoning
-rush, she tore Shiela’s throat with a
-backward thrust of her muzzle and was free
-in a twinkling. Badly cut in several places,
-dazed by the speed of the combat, the wolfhound
-was soon forced to let her go.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela and Friday were fast friends, albeit
-the diversity of dimensions was productive of
-intermittent rancor. It was Friday’s wont to
-rush at her fiercely, to seize one powerful leg
-in his mouth and worry it, whereat Shiela
-would hit him a playful pat that sent him reeling
-ten yards. But Friday came of a staunch
-breed, and he returned to the sport again and
-again. Often the wolfhound would stretch
-herself out on the ground, and thus recumbent,
-the fox-terrier could almost reach her head.
-Over Shiela would roll, lying on her back with
-legs in the air, while Friday snorted and
-grunted valorously as he shook her by the
-throat or the ear. But the fun always ended
-in the same way: a clumsy blow would catch
-Friday full on the head and he would dash off
-to his master with cries of pain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Steve oughtn’t for to keep her round headquarters,”
-the blacksmith remonstrated to
-Dick. “She’s shore too big. Pore li’l Friday!
-When she gits into my shop, Dick, I swan her
-ol’ tail is like to send my tools flying which-ways.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where’d he keep her, then? He cain’t
-turn her out on the range to eat grass,” sneered
-Dick.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The blacksmith was silenced, but there was
-born in him a dislike of the hound. It happened
-that, when next the terrier came yelping
-from play, O’Donnell had ridden off to a
-tank. The blacksmith issued from the shop
-and hurled a bolt at Shiela. She dodged, but
-did not run, and the bristles on her neck stiffened
-in warning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Aside from the manager, who spent much of
-the year with his family in Denver, the blacksmith
-was the only married man with the
-Tumbling H outfit. He had a son three years
-of age. Oscar was the child’s name,--a
-sturdy, ruddy-cheeked youngster he was--and
-from the outset he was the apple of Shiela’s
-eye. The boy could pull her ears or tail with
-absolute impunity, and into the yawning cavity
-she would open to his teasing, he would
-thrust a chubby fist.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oscar! Oscar! My baby, don’t,” his
-mother would cry. But Shiela was infinitely
-tender with him, and the two would roll on the
-ground in a tight embrace, while the child
-thumped a tattoo on the wolfhound’s ribs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It befell on a morning that they indulged in
-this frolic until both were in a state of unbridled
-excitement. Crowing with delight, the
-baby staggered to his feet and tried to butt
-Shiela with his head. Forgetting for a fraction
-of time how fragile was this cherished
-morsel of humanity, the wolfhound struck out
-joyously with her paw, bowling him over like
-a ninepin. As he went backward, the boy essayed
-to break his fall on the ground by thrusting
-out his left arm; it doubled under him and
-snapped at the elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A single wailing cry brought his father running
-from the smithy. Oscar lay white-faced,
-the wolfhound nosing him eagerly in an endeavor
-to stir the baby to a resumption of play.
-Flinging a curse at the dog, the blacksmith
-picked up his son and carried him to his mother.
-Ten minutes passed, which Shiela spent in vain
-efforts to ascertain what kept her playmate
-from her, and Peck emerged from the bunkhouse
-with a shotgun. The quick-sensing
-Shiela disappeared without further ado around
-a corner of the saddle-shed; but, as the blacksmith
-followed on a run, O’Donnell’s voice
-stayed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’re you doing with that gun, Peck?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shiela done broke Oscar’s arm, and I aim
-to git even--that’s what.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t be a fool!” the boss cried sharply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Peck faced him, his lips twitching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I may do more’n shoot a bitch, Steve,” he
-said, and his voice was calm now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t mean that, Peck.” The range
-boss continued to advance, his eyes on the
-troubled eyes of the blacksmith. “Shee-la and
-little Oscar have always been friends. Didn’t
-she pull him out of the creek only last week?
-She couldn’t have smashed his arm on purpose.
-You can’t blame a dog for an accident.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The blacksmith cursed Shiela to the eightieth
-generation; but O’Donnell smiled and
-tapped the barrel of the gun with his forefinger.
-There would be no shooting of man or
-dog now, he knew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Put it away, Peck. We’ll forget all about
-it. I’ll ride over to Deadeye and bring the
-doctor myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The blacksmith wavered and obeyed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Little Oscar was soon able to toddle about,
-with his arm in a cast and a sling. But Peck’s
-dislike for the hound grew to hate. In the
-short winter days and long winter nights he
-watched and brooded, waiting for an opportunity
-to make her suffer. His hostility to the
-soft-eyed, affectionate Shiela took the form of
-an intense nervous sensibility to her every
-movement--one sees precisely the same symptoms
-in persons who are unhappily cooped up
-for any length of time. Soon the bigness of
-the animal grated on his nerves, so that whatever
-she did excited in him childish spleen.
-Even when Shiela ate, Peck could not look at
-her magnificent satisfaction without falling
-into a paroxysm of loathing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Once he spread pieces of meat cunningly
-about the saddle-shed where she was wont to
-loll while the child slept in the afternoons.
-Shiela espied and swallowed these tidbits with
-much relish, and stalked away to get a drink,
-feeling unaccountably thirsty. There was no
-water in the trough; and that saved her life.
-Soon a tremor came upon the wolfhound, so
-that she swayed uncertainly, her nose close to
-the ground, froth slathering her muzzle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this moment Oscar rocketed from the
-bunkhouse at his usual ungainly gallop. The
-boy knew exactly what to do. Had he not endured
-agony, too? There was only one sure
-remedy for belly-pains, and it stood on a shelf
-in the kitchen--he never passed the shelf without
-a certain creeping of the flesh. How he
-forced castor oil upon the dog is one of those
-modern miracles that are wrought for babes
-and the inebriated. At any rate, with only
-one arm free, he administered a glorious dose,
-and, feeling full of pity for the tortures of
-which she mumbled so weakly, he followed it
-with generous hunks of greasy bacon purloined
-from the big brown crockery jar in the pantry.
-Shiela became violently ill and Oscar feared
-for her life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dick! Dick! She sick. Hurry, oh
-hurry!” Oscar ran to summon help.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela survived, and O’Donnell devoted the
-better part of a day to impassioned dissertations
-on the folly of leaving strychnine baits
-for coyotes round the saddle-shed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One evening in midwinter, the range boss,
-Dick, the cook, and Peck sat in the bunkhouse,
-as usual, trifling with a pile of dominos.
-Shiela lay dozing in front of the fire. The
-wolfhound had shown considerable restlessness
-of late and Dick had cautioned O’Donnell to
-chain her up. It came Mit’s turn to play and,
-as he was ponderously miring himself, the
-night silence was rent by the hunting cry of
-the loafer. So near was it, so savagely compelling,
-that the men sent the benches back in
-amaze. The effect on Shiela was extraordinary.
-She was at the door, scratching for her
-liberty, whining, turning appealing eyes to
-O’Donnell that he should open.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dick gazed at the range boss and waggled
-his wise bald head. “You better lock her up,
-Steve, or you’ll shore lose that ol’ dog.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was locked in the smithy the next evening,
-and in the morning the shed was empty.
-O’Donnell was positive that the staple and chain
-on the door had been secure when he left her
-the night before; yet now the staple dangled
-free, with a splinter attached. Reflecting that
-the hound’s weight made this feat possible, he
-ceased to speculate; and in the blacksmith’s
-soul entered peace. Shiela had fled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Wednesday following fell blustery, with
-a bullying wind, and the range boss sat late at
-his table, working over a cattle tally by the
-light of a lantern. A timid scratching on the
-door-sill disturbed him, and he listened curiously.
-There it was again, this time accompanied
-by a plaintive whine. He reached the
-handle in a stride.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shee-la! Shee-la, old girl!” His glad cry
-brought Mit running. Shiela slunk into the
-room and crossed to the fire, which she sniffed
-doubtfully and then lay down in front of it.
-Down her throat and across her left shoulder
-burned cherry-colored slashes. She touched
-her tongue to them and began to clean her
-soiled coat, while O’Donnell stood watching,
-lost in wonder. The wolfhound growled as
-he moved, but he laughed affectionately and
-stooped to the fearfully lowered head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So you’ve come back--like the prodigal,”
-he whispered. “Poor, poor Shee-la!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mit,” he bawled the next instant, “kill the
-spotted calf, or the fatted heifer, or whatever
-else will do. She’s hungry.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Not being conversant with the tale of the
-erring son, the cook roared back a request to
-Steve to have sense--didn’t he know there
-wasn’t a calf in the pen?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bring some beef, then,” laughed the
-boss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The animal’s eyes followed her master furtively.
-He noted that flickering gleam with a
-pang--the fear and suspicion of the hunted in
-it. So much had three days with the wild
-linked up the slack chain of her blood tie.
-Then presently she licked his hand, and the
-look that answered his was soft and appealing
-as of old.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here’s enough to choke her,” announced
-Mit cheerily, entering with a slab of beef.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hound sprang at him and the cook, taking
-no chances, hurled the raw meat into the
-air. She caught it as it touched the floor and
-tore into it with the desperate zest of the
-famished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The days drifted one into another, and the
-Tumbling H men rose and ate and slept, and
-rose again, which is the sum of many lives.
-Of work there could be little until the spring
-rains fell. Would the good days of the
-roundup never come? Oh, the sweltering
-hours in the saddle, and the bellowings of
-mighty herds, and the choking dust of the
-corrals in branding!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela was carefully guarded. In the first
-of the mild weather she contributed to the
-bustling cheer of the bunkhouse a litter of four
-lusty pups. It was as much as a man’s life
-was worth to go nearer than six feet to the
-tugging little rascals; but the boy Oscar, who
-did not know this, proceeded calmly to inspect
-and caress them. The mother flared in a sudden,
-quaping rage, but instantly sank back and
-became reconciled to the extent of permitting
-the baby, quite undaunted by his first reception,
-to stroke her progeny with his pudgy
-hands. She watched him jealously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Summer rushed upon the land, and the
-Tumbling H outfit got to horse and rode forth.
-In November O’Donnell shipped seven thousand
-head of steers to help stay the world’s
-maw, and in December there were four men
-playing at cards again in the bunkhouse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Steve,”--the cook cleared his throat as he
-riffled the cards,--“is it my deal? Shore.
-Say, Steve, one of Shiela’s pups is killing
-chickens. He’d ’a got a turkey too, only I
-done seen him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You ought for to have killed ’em all when
-they were teeny pups, Steve,” broke in the
-blacksmith. “What was the use of keeping
-two? Anyone kin see they’re more wolf than
-dog.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s your play,” the boss said evenly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela had the run of quarters, but her
-broad-jowled, heavy-shouldered pups were
-chained in the smithy. Just what to do with
-them was a problem. Shiela had exhibited no
-special affection since they were weaned, and it
-needed only the merest glance to detect the bar
-sinister. Had only the eyes been visible, there
-was that in their glint which betrayed the wolf.
-Yet, in the tawny coats and a certain lithe
-spring in gathering for a stride, the youngsters
-favored their mother.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A loafer wolf made a foray from the cañon
-on a Sunday night, when the range boss and
-Mit played seven-up and the blacksmith poisoned
-life with a concertina. He killed a milch-pen
-calf close to headquarters; yet so silent
-was the raid that the men heard nothing of it,
-though Shiela cried protests to be gone and
-growled at intervals. In the smithy the pups
-bayed deep-voiced greetings. They leaped
-and snapped their teeth, and gnawed and raved
-to be free. Forgetting that O’Donnell had
-unchained them, Dick went to the door to still
-the brutes. They hurled themselves over
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here’s where the trouble starts, Shee-la,”
-observed her master dubiously. She wagged
-her tail and looked up at him in curiosity, for
-she had practically forgotten the pups.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a bitter winter, and the cattle sickened
-and died in hundreds. The men rode
-range in all weathers, setting out oil-cake and
-salt; but what help could be given to thirty
-thousand head? Carrion waxed fat. And
-then, one day in Deadeye, whither he had
-journeyed for supplies at the first hint of
-spring, the range boss stumbled on a strange
-tale. The wolves were out, bolder and
-stronger than they had been in a generation.
-They were making no stealthy, lone hunts,--a
-swift leap from the dark upon a helpless
-thing, and then the gorge,--but waged an almost
-systematic war of pillage. The leader
-was a shaggy veteran of speckled gray that ran
-with a limp; and with him--the men of Deadeye
-hoped they might perish horribly were this
-not so--with him there ran two fawn-colored
-wolves like no lobo of the west country. They
-were, perhaps, slightly shorter than a cowhorse;
-that is, of course, a strong roping horse,
-not a stunted pony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shee-la, you’ve surely done it now,” O’Donnell
-told her with a sigh. She thrust her moist
-muzzle into his hand to be petted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In less than seven days’ time Padden reported
-from a division camp that he had come
-on the carcass of a freshly killed heifer near
-a salt trough. The wolves had hamstrung the
-poor brute and had fallen to their grim feast
-before life was extinct, he thought; which is
-not unusual. O’Donnell vowed a war of extermination.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The mail-carrier came upon the pack casting
-about beside the trail, at fault in running
-an antelope. They let him approach within
-two hundred yards, gazing insolently, then
-flitted swiftly through a jungle of mesquite
-trees. His story was that beside the wily gray
-scoundrel that led, raced two tall creatures,
-half wolf, half dog, which ran with a long,
-springy stride foreign to lobo locomotion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s Shiela’s pups,” the blacksmith exclaimed
-venomously, when the mail-carrier related
-this experience at dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, they’re Shee-la’s pups,” O’Donnell admitted;
-and, “Poor Shee-la!” he said. Then
-raising his voice with decision:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Johnson, you tell them in Deadeye that I’ll
-give fifty dollars each for those pups, and
-fifty for the old gray fellow. Put up a notice
-in the post-office. Or--wait, I’ll write one for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The result of this placard was an egress from
-Deadeye of eight ambitious hunters, who went
-their several ways, wishful to earn two months’
-pay by a lucky shot. They straggled back
-empty-handed at the end of a week. While
-they were thus engaged, the pack ranged wide.
-They killed at Cedar Creek, but were compelled
-to abandon their prey, and slew again
-before daylight on a nester’s place on the outskirts
-of Deadeye. Here, too, they let the life
-out of an interfering collie. Long immunity
-had made them contemptuous--or was it that
-they gave ear to the counsels of man-raised
-mates? They raided the Tumbling H headquarters
-in quest of certain turkeys that were
-Mit’s solace in dark days, and from ambuscade
-the cook slew his finest gobbler with buckshot,
-in a berserker effort to shoot one lissome marauder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela and Friday led uneventful lives amid
-all this harrying and turmoil of pursuit. They
-frisked and wrestled on the baked, cracked
-ground, or basked in the sun until it grew too
-hot and the flies became unbearable in attack,
-when they would slouch to the cool of the
-long bunk-room. Shiela had forgotten all
-about her degenerate offspring, and held herself
-fearlessly and with pride as an honest
-dog.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More than once she and the terrier took
-jaunts over the low hills toward the cañon, in
-spite of the watch on her goings-out. It might
-be a rabbit they pursued, or the zigzagging
-trail of a coyote; or it might be that rare scent,
-the antelope’s. One afternoon they disported
-themselves, chasing some half-wild hogs that
-roamed the range.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A long-snouted porker of tender years was
-rooting about a patch of bear-grass, when
-suddenly he cocked his impudent nose and appeared
-to listen intently. Shiela and Friday
-stopped short in a game of tag, to watch. The
-pig did not turn his head, but continued to
-stand at attention, his ears twitching. What
-could it mean? Shiela crept closer. With a
-speed that left her dumbfounded, the pig
-sprang sidewise on to a spot his glance had
-certainly not been regarding, and simultaneously
-tore with his jaws at a writhing, earth-colored
-coil. Shiela drew off respectfully and
-in trepidation, while he devoured his victim
-with beautiful hog voracity. It was the
-dreaded rattler, which he had killed with two
-lightning strokes of forefeet and jaws.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So the days passed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the meantime, O’Donnell had other things
-than Shiela or wolves to think about. The
-manager had resigned, and the boss added to
-the superintendence of the active work of the
-range, the conduct of the business of the
-Tumbling H company, the sale and the shipping
-of Tumbling H cattle. He was an enthusiast
-on improving the breed of his cattle and
-horses; and his anger was deep, therefore, when
-late in the autumn his men found the remains of
-a young stallion. He was a splendid beast, but
-newly come from Kentucky, and ignorant of
-perils and the necessity for perpetual vigilance.
-Apparently he had been cut out from the band
-he lorded it over,--sheer foolhardiness, this--and,
-alone in the battle against heavy odds, had
-been pulled down. That he died full of fight
-was sufficiently evident: the battered body of
-an exceptionally large young wolf lay on the
-ground beside his own.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela sniffed at the carcass of this creature,
-then moved away unconcernedly, circling for
-another scent; but the hide caught O’Donnell’s
-gaze and held it. The coat was of a peculiar
-tawny hue, running in spots to red. There was
-something in the lines of the body and legs that
-struck a reminiscent chord in his memory. He
-glanced from it to Shiela, turning the body
-over with his foot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If that isn’t one of your litter, old girl, I’m
-much mistaken,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Shiela, then, must atone. With all the dogs
-of Deadeye to help, she should hunt these bold
-ravagers. Hers was the crime; hers must be
-the expiation, even at the cost of life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, old girl,” he said, as he ambled away
-from headquarters three days later, with Shiela
-beside him, “here’s your one chance to wipe
-out your little slip. A lot of us humans
-don’t get that, my lady. So go to it and clear
-your name, Shee-la.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were twenty-five dogs on hand at the
-rendezvous, about thirteen more than were
-needed, and they ranged from bloodhounds and
-greyhounds to a wheezy water-spaniel, which
-thought he knew a scent when he struck it, and
-whose master fondled the same delusion of
-him. His presence led to a dispute at the outset,
-because the spaniel persisted in messing
-about and mugging a trail, and his owner pig-headedly
-abetted him. The owner was set in
-argument, and carried a long, smooth-bore
-rifle. However, both were persuaded to go
-home, quite convinced that spiteful jealousy
-was at the bottom of this attitude.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So that’s Shiela?” queried a Gourd
-puncher. “I reckon you ought to kill her,
-O’Donnell. It’s her pup and his father what’s
-raising all the hell. She might run away ag’in
-and--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s my dog, Joe,” the boss cut in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hard upon his words, old Rags gave tongue
-and went away on a warm scent. Luck was
-with the hunters. Within two miles the dogs
-were running free, their noses in the air, making
-the ridges ring to their eager yelping; and
-a wolf, a tawny, limber-limbed wolf, smashed
-through a tangle of weeds and briars at the
-head of a gulch and streaked across the open
-country. The pack laid themselves out in pursuit,
-Shiela and the greyhounds running silently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wolfhound was well up with the leaders.
-A dozen strides would have brought the
-quarry to bay, when a speckled gray shape
-burst into view beneath her feet and departed
-at a tangent to her line of running, heading
-for a shallow draw. Shiela and one greyhound
-swerved and dashed after him. The others of
-the pack kept on behind the flagging fugitive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Everything was against the gray. He was
-old, and the combats and the hunts of years
-had stiffened his muscles. He was full fed
-and heavy; slumbering, he had blundered into
-the chase when he could have lain low. The
-two silent things behind carried in their sinewy
-bodies the speed and stamina of generations of
-dogs whose special business in life it had been
-to run. A wall of earth faced them, the bank
-of a dried stream, and he must scale it in his
-flight. Well he knew that the race was over.
-He must fight, and as well here as elsewhere.
-When it comes to the last test of courage, the
-king of wolves is indeed a king.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A rapid glance over his shoulder showed
-him the greyhound almost at his flank. He
-reached the bank by a desperate spurt, whirled,
-and with one rending stroke, cast back the first
-pursuer, coughing in the throes of death. But
-the shock of the charge shook him for an instant
-and in that fraction of time he was unprepared
-to withstand the crushing velocity
-of Shiela’s onslaught. On his hind legs, his
-worn fangs gleaming, he received her. She
-went straight for his throat, and the grip being
-an eminently satisfactory one, she did not
-release it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><a id='legs'></a></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i174.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0006' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'>“<span class='it'>On his hind legs, his worn fangs gleaming, he received her</span>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To and fro the big gray dragged her, over
-and over, tearing with his forefeet to pry her
-off, snapping his wide jaws in futile efforts to
-seize his enemy. His hind claws ripped unavailingly
-along the wolfhound’s sides; he
-writhed and twisted to gain an inch of freedom
-for his head--only an inch, and he could reach
-her shoulder. Once only Shiela growled, a
-deep, rumbling note of content. She knew
-what she had to do, and she felt this to be the
-right way. Slowly her jaws tightened and
-she hung to him soundlessly. The rasping
-snarls grew fainter; the tremendous heavings
-and lurchings slackened. The old lord of the
-cañon had made his last fight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was O’Donnell who drove her off.
-Blown but triumphant, he raced from the
-slaughter of the first quarry, and gave a long
-whistle of incredulity at sight of the slain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Father and son--father and son in one
-day,” he exclaimed. Then, “Poor Shee-la.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As they trotted cheerily homeward, the
-wolfhound kept close to O’Donnell’s horse, and
-whenever she glanced up at him, frisking
-clumsily the while, he grinned down at her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve wiped out your fault, Shee-la.
-You’ve done more than most,” he observed
-seriously, as they neared the ranch. “I
-thought once I’d have to send you away. Or--or
-send you out on the long trail.” Shiela
-leaped playfully at his horse’s bridle. “But
-we’ll stick together. Only,” he drew a deep
-breath, “we’ll take a holiday. We’ll go back--back
-home to County Mayo, old girl.”</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chVI'></a>VI<br/> <span class='sub-head'>MOLLY</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may be there are persons who will scoff
-at the assertion that there is more of sentiment
-in a cow than in any creature of four
-legs that walks the earth. Cavilers, these--hard-shelled
-individuals who look at the gentle
-bovine through the eye of commercialism, not
-gifted to see beyond her barnyard activities toward
-the nourishment of mankind. It is reasonably
-established that one may approach a
-horse in comradely security, confident of fair
-play. The rules as to hybrids are these: you
-walk up to a mule in a spirit of veneration and
-religious preparedness, wearing a sickly aspect
-of confidence. And you quaver soothing
-words and carry a club behind your back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But toward a cow--ah, that is different.
-Here is a mainstay of life, a pillar and prop
-of civilization. Here is--well, a cow is a cow.
-Why, there was the time when three hundred
-furiously anxious, bawling mothers smashed
-out of a stout wooden corral on the Turkey
-Track range and laid a straight course across
-seven leagues of territory, in quest of their
-helpless progeny, mercilessly cooped in cars at
-a railroad siding, awaiting shipment to an Arizona
-butcher. They kept two well-grown men
-atop a water-tank for five hours, and--but to
-attempt a citation of cases would be idle. This
-is the simple tale of Molly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was not an especially pretty animal,
-Molly--just plain cow, dun in color, with a
-Jersey strain somewhere among her remote
-forebears. Yet, one could not gaze on Molly
-for long without a feeling of profound respect
-pervading his soul. It was not because one
-could see with half an eye that she gave large
-quantities of milk; that was merely the performance
-of her natural functions. Nor was
-it that her wistful regard suggested all the sorrows
-of her sex. Molly in some way made a
-subtle appeal to sympathy that cannot be
-voiced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a matter of fact, she ought to have been
-the pampered occupant of a clover field by day
-and of a stall by night. Instead, she was
-roaming the zacaton flats of the Tumbling K
-and losing herself among the blackbrush
-ridges, in vague wonder that the world was
-grown so large. Designed to be a respectable
-milch-cow on a dairy farm, here she was in the
-heart of a wilderness, and all because of a boy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He came among us, pink and white and fearfully
-clean; and he was the owner’s son. There
-were eleven thousand cows in our domain, but
-milk had been a thing of rumor to the outfit,
-perhaps because it is inconvenient to milk on
-horseback. Now, however, Vance shoved his
-legs under the boards at the bunk-house and
-objected to clear, biting coffee. So, when he
-departed blacker than a Mexican, with a two
-months’ beard and overalls sustained by a
-strand of rope,--babbling wild things of a bath
-he would take, a bath that would endure for a
-day and a night,--we still had Molly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That cow’s got a mind, I tell you,” Uncle
-Henry assured the outfit at supper. “She’s
-got a mind jist like you or me, Dave, only
-better than yourn. Pass them frijoles.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Perhaps Molly did have a mind. At any
-rate, she was humanly lonesome. To be the
-only one of her kind in a tract of five thousand
-acres--they kept her in the horse pasture--was
-depressing to a companionable disposition.
-The bronchos on the river flats and
-mesquite-clothed hills were shy, wild creatures,
-subject to alarms and foolish panic. With
-mild wonder she would watch them break into
-a run at a sound or a strange scent. They
-were masterful, too, always driving her away
-from the water-holes and the salt until they
-had had their fill. Instinctively she was afraid
-when one of them approached with careless
-confidence that she would give place. Yet,
-though unhappy, Molly never overlooked her
-duty, and each morning and each evening she
-stood quiet while Uncle Henry milked her, occasionally
-rumbling a note of satisfaction or
-sweeping at a fly with cautious backward
-swings of her head. Uncle Henry was becoming
-too stiff for hard riding, and now spent
-most of his time trying to persuade himself
-and others that the odd jobs he applied himself
-to were of his own choosing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One morning Molly awoke to turmoil.
-Wondrous noises came to her on the west wind,
-and she arose and walked to the imprisoning
-fence. Truly the Tumbling K was become a
-Babel. In the wide, browned valleys, on the
-mesas, and far into the fastnesses of the Mules,
-bulls and cows and clumsy calves were on the
-march, with riders hanging in rear. Molly
-could hear the churning of the hosts on
-the round-up ground, and to her nostrils was
-wafted the taint of the dust belching heavenward
-in clouds. For the Tumbling K range
-was to be divided, and eight thousand head
-must be turned over to the retiring partner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Where did all the cattle come from? Molly
-had never dreamed there were such hordes of
-her kind in the world. Armies of them filed
-by in long lines, the cowboys on flank and in
-rear shouting, whistling, spurring into the press
-in their efforts to urge the herds forward.
-Molly stood at the barb-wire fence most of the
-day, staring at this rally of her species. Sometimes
-she bawled a troubled greeting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And the little calves! Many a toddling
-new-born, strayed from its mother and solicitous
-of protection, staggered out to sniff at the
-kindly disposed creature that nosed it so tenderly
-from the other side of a four-strand
-barrier. All night the trampling of sleepless
-thousands and the bawling of steers and worried
-cows came to disturb Molly’s slumbers.
-The bed-ground for the herds was not four
-hundred yards distant from the pasture fence.
-She could see tiny intermittent lights move
-slowly about them in a wide circle, where the
-men on guard smoked as they rode their
-rounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next day her heart was filled with forebodings
-and uneasiness. Hundreds of cattle were
-driven into an extensive corral within the confines
-of her pasture, and thence, in small groups,
-they went into a chute, propelled by the whoops
-and outcries of sundry reckless horsemen who
-crowded their rear. Molly watched and wondered.
-She saw these cattle forced singly into
-a narrow runway; she saw them caught fast
-in a squeezer, heard their bellows of consternation
-and fright; and then there reached her
-the stinging odor of burned hair, when the
-branding irons seared the flesh. Upon which
-Molly would flip her tail in the air and lope
-away. But she always returned; much as she
-feared it, she could not leave this anguished
-assemblage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was Uncle Henry who discovered that the
-arrival of the herds was demoralizing our faithful
-benefactor. She no longer grazed sedately;
-even the succulent grama-grass of the
-creek-bottom failed to hold her, and she walked
-the barb-wire ceaselessly day and night. Her
-weight fell off in alarming fashion, and when,
-on the third evening, Uncle Henry approached
-with outstretched hand and honeyed speech,
-and the milk-pail cunningly concealed, she
-shook her big, patient head and moved off.
-He followed, and she quickened her pace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Consarn your fat haid!” roared Uncle
-Henry, never a patient man. “Hold still or
-I’ll take the hide off’n you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He tore after Molly, threatening dire visitations.
-Now, it takes an extremely clever person
-to circumvent a determined cow, when he
-is on foot and she has five thousand acres in
-which to manœuver, and Uncle Henry returned
-to headquarters, howling for somebody
-to lend him a horse and he would drag that old
-fool clear to Texas. We went without milk
-that night, and grumbled and swore precisely
-as if we had had nothing else all our lives.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk102'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hi-yi! Bear down on him, cowboys.
-More frijoles here!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a yell, Big John sprang to the lever of
-the squeezer and threw all his strength on it,
-gripping a plunging steer about the middle as
-he strove to win through the chute.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hot iron! Hot iron!” the wagon boss
-shrieked. “Somebody build that fire up. All
-right. That’s got him, Cas.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Molly hung about near the corral, gazing on
-these frenzied activities in consternation. It
-was early morning and low-hanging mists were
-shredding before the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some calves passed through the chute by inadvertence.
-Being too small for the squeezer
-to hold, they were noosed as they came out, and
-branded on the ground. One was so tiny that
-the men at work beside the runway, idly rolling
-cigarettes during a halt in the operations,
-failed altogether to perceive him above the
-heavy lower boarding. As a result, he sauntered
-into the open, and there was no noose
-ready to snare. His ears were twitching with
-curiosity, and he moved his legs as if they were
-stiff and his feet hurt, as indeed they did, because
-he had come many weary miles and he
-was not three days old.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hi-yi! There goes a calf!” yelled the
-punchers. “Go to him, John. He’s just your
-size.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Big John grinned, spat on his hands, and
-made a dive for the fugitive. “The li’l’ rascal,”
-he chuckled, grabbing for its tail. Instead of
-taking to the open and falling a prey to a
-roper, the calf lunged sideways and went under
-the horse-pasture fence. He was so short that
-he easily bowed his back and slid beneath the
-wire. The outfit sent up a shout of laughter,
-and exhorted John to stay with him; but the
-giant remained where he was, gazing fixedly at
-the fugitive. Molly was on the other side of
-the fence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To her side the white-face bolted, confident
-of sanctuary. For a cow, Molly was terribly
-agitated. She turned about and about, trying
-to obtain a really good look at this forward
-baby who greeted her as his mother. The
-calf, on his part, kept close in an endeavor to
-secure his supper, being very hungry and properly
-careless as to where he got it. Molly
-smelled and sniffed at him, and edged off in intense
-nervousness. Evidently quite positive in
-his own mind that he had found what he had
-been seeking, the calf gave over all useless fuss
-and set himself resolutely to obtain a meal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let him go, John,” the boss called. “We
-lost his mother over on the Magayan.
-Molly’ll look after him. Look out! Bear
-down on him, cowboys! It’s that big ol’
-bull.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Molly was thrilling to long-pent yearnings,
-and the vapors of self-delusion welled up to
-befog her instincts. After five minutes of nosing,
-the Jersey came to the conclusion that this
-must be her son, and yielded to his hungry importunities.
-With a deep murmur of content,
-she walked away, followed by her adopted
-baby. And behind a sage-brush, safe from interference,
-she fed him. The outfit watched
-them go in amazement, prophesying many
-things.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of the few things they did not foretell
-came to pass next morning. Molly had hidden
-the calf behind some soapweed while she went
-to graze a few rods off, and, the dawn being
-still gray and the air stinging cold, we picked
-that particular bunch of weed for a bonfire
-to provide warmth while the wrangler was
-bringing up the horses. When the match
-flared, the calf on the other side of the shooting
-sparks staggered to his feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ba-a-a-a-aw!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s the little ’un,” John whooped.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He said no more, because at that moment
-came the dull pounding of hoofs on grass, and
-there was Molly, her head held high, turning
-her gaze jerkily from one to another, after the
-manner of cows when preparing to charge.
-We forgot about the fire for the moment and
-headed for the corral fence, streaming across
-country twenty strong, with Molly in hot pursuit.
-Big John eluded her by dodging dexterously
-behind a bush, leaving a portion of his
-overalls with the cow, and she abandoned the
-chase at once, returning to her charge. Him
-she licked and caressed with many mumbled
-endearments, making sure that he was unhurt.
-The calf took all this stoically and as a matter
-of course, considering it his due, and fell to
-breakfast. Molly gazed across at her late
-friends sitting spectrally astride the fence, and
-all the anger was gone from her eyes. They
-were large and melting with tenderness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A crippled horse was shot that day,--the
-broncho-buster threw him too hard, breaking
-a leg,--and to the carcass a coyote skulked
-when night shut down. About eleven o’clock
-Molly got to her knees, in which position she
-remained a few seconds, meditating; then rose
-to walk about, nibbling at the grass. All cattle
-get up in this manner between eleven o’clock
-and midnight to graze for a few minutes and
-then lie down on the other side. This may be
-the basis of an old superstition that “good cows
-say their prayers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Molly, with the warmth of the snuggling
-calf still on her side, wandered farther than she
-intended. Abruptly she thrust her nose into
-the wind and sniffed. It was a stale, penetrating
-stench, and inherited knowledge warned
-her there was danger. Back ran Molly in a
-tremor of anxiety, her head wagging from side
-to side in her efforts to glimpse the marauder.
-Behind a clump of bear-grass crouched a coyote,
-his foxlike nose pointed toward the spot
-where snoozed her unprotected son. Inch by
-inch he slunk forward; now his muscles grew
-taut for the leap.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whoo-oo-oo-huh! snorted Molly, smashing
-down upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wolf straightened and wheeled with a
-flash of gray, and sprang, all in one movement.
-So marvelously quick was he that escape would
-have been certain ninety-nine times in a hundred.
-A bull would have borne down on him
-with lowered head and eyes shut, like a runaway
-freight train; a cow charges with eyes
-open, and Molly, consumed with mother-wrath,
-ripped sideways with her sharp horns as the
-hunter swerved. A shapeless bundle of
-brown-gray fur was tossed into the air, and
-when it struck the ground and rebounded,
-Molly went at it again. This time she caught
-him full with her horns, and, quite by chance,
-followed stumblingly on his ribs with her forefeet.
-The coyote squirmed away from this
-terrible avenger, snapping futilely at her muzzle,
-and a cry from the calf distracted the Jersey
-from a burning desire to complete the good
-work. When she abandoned him to run to
-her adopted son, the wolf made as if to flee;
-but he was hurt unto death, and sank down
-miserably under a mesquite, his glinting eyes
-searching the brush for foes. And through the
-long night he panted out his life, until at dawn
-the last spark flickered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a big ol’ ki-yote”--John stirred the
-carcass with his boot--“A bull done ripped
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There aren’t any bulls in the horse pasture,”
-the boss retorted. “Only Molly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By one impulse the outfit turned in their
-saddles to look for her. There stood the Jersey
-a hundred paces off, feeding tranquilly on
-mesquite pods. Toddling at her heels was a
-red, white-faced calf of sturdy frame and curly
-coat. Molly was behaving as if she had never
-done anything more exciting in her life than
-eat bran mash.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good ol’ Molly,” they called back, as they
-rode to the bunk-house for dinner. Molly,
-hearing the familiar name, lifted her head to
-regard the cavalcade soberly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We went without milk cheerfully enough
-now and speculated at every meal as to the
-probable course Molly would pursue as the calf
-grew. There was little else to talk about.
-Some vowed she would get over her hallucination
-quickly and abandon the youngster.
-Uncle Henry thought differently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s a better mother to him than his own
-would have been. I never done saw a range
-cow look after her calf like Molly does that
-rascal. And ain’t he fat!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wagon boss conceived it to be in the line
-of his duty to brand the calf. A man was despatched
-to rope him. He returned presently
-to say that Molly would not permit him to get
-near. “She went on the peck and gored my
-horse.” He exhibited a red wale along his
-mount’s flank.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t rope a calf away from its
-mother?” the boss exclaimed, dumbfounded.
-“Pshaw! You’d better go back to cotton-pickin’,
-Cas.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He spurred away to bring in the culprit himself.
-What were cowboys coming to nowadays?
-He would show them! We mounted the
-corral fence the better to view proceedings, and
-waxed merry of spirit when Molly chased the
-boss six separate times. Molly would not be
-frightened or enticed away from her son, but
-turned to confront this unexpected enemy
-when he galloped at her. As for the calf, he
-glued himself to Molly’s side and would not
-budge therefrom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Will we stretch her out, Pink?” we shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” the boss roared.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He made another try and almost got his rope
-over the calf; but the Jersey went at him
-just then and gave him something else to do.
-So the boss ambled back, grinning sheepishly
-behind his sandy mustache.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon”--he cleared his throat--“I
-reckon that’s one on me, boys. Let him go
-just now. We’ll get him in the spring.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Uncle Henry was the only human being
-that the Jersey would permit within five yards
-of her baby. He entertained a sort of proprietary
-affection for the cow, and she reciprocated
-save when such cordial relationship clashed with
-her love for the adopted one. At such moments
-Uncle Henry was not to be considered,
-of course, and she was as ready to put him on
-the fence or speed him round a bush as any
-other member of the Tumbling K outfit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Upon a day in September, he was on his way
-back from patching the line fence, when he
-espied Molly trotting distractedly about a narrow
-draw. She stopped to stare as he approached,
-then resumed her agitated run.
-From time to time she dashed to the brink of
-an arroyo to gaze down. Uncle Henry
-watched her, surmising from the stores of his
-experience what had happened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’ll jist about go on the prod and rip me
-if I try to git him out.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Molly took a few steps toward him, lowed
-pitifully, and returned to look down at the unfortunate
-calf. He advanced with caution, anticipating
-a rush; but Molly only lowed again
-and made way for him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I swan, she wants me to pull him out,” said
-Uncle Henry in a reverent tone. “If that
-don’t beat every--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He alighted and walked to the arroyo’s rim.
-Ten feet below, on the sandy bottom of a hole
-whose precipitous sides prevented him climbing
-out, lay the white-face. Uncle Henry
-deftly dropped a noose over its head, and
-dragged the kicking youngster to safety.
-When he went to remove the rope, Molly suffered
-him to handle her son, though she glared
-in swift suspicion when Uncle Henry threw
-him to the ground and knelt on his body to free
-the loop from his neck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Boys,” said the boss at supper one night,
-“Molly has got to go.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh-ho! Ho, indeed!” Uncle Henry retorted
-with fine sarcasm. “Oh, yes,” he added,
-unable to think of anything better to say.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The boss shook his head sadly over the
-clamor that ensued. He spoke of the matter
-as a man of feeling would acquaint a wife of
-her husband’s taking-off; but it had to be. An
-order had come to deliver Molly to Bockus, the
-butcher at Blackwater.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What! Lose Molly? The boss was locoed,
-or worse. Had he by any chance secured a
-bottle, of whose whereabouts we were in ignorance?
-We would buy the cow ourselves first.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was an off-day. The branding was done,
-and the Tumbling K outfit was awaiting the
-arrival of a purchase of four thousand steers
-from the South. Thus it came about that
-twelve of us rode into Blackwater, and Big
-John was spokesman. John was not much of
-a speaker, being given to profanity when a congestion
-of language threatened, but he had a
-grand theme, and talked about Molly in a way
-that made us cough.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bless my heart,” cried the owner of the
-Tumbling K, when the nub of the matter was
-revealed. “Bless my heart!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He gaped, then squeezed the mighty muscles
-of Big John’s shoulder and laughed. All this
-fuss about a cow--one forlorn dun cow. The
-puncher grinned in his turn, shuffling his feet;
-for they knew and understood each other, these
-two, having been associated for eighteen years.
-That is why Bockus received the strange explanation
-he did when he called to protest
-against the delay in delivering Molly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s just this way,” the cattleman observed,
-slipping an elastic band about his tally-book.
-“If I let you have that cow for thirty, I lose
-precisely nine hundred and thirty-seven dollars.
-No; Molly stays.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nine hundred and--Why, man, you’re
-crazy! How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ask those strikers of mine,” came the answer,
-accompanied by a chuckle. “Great
-weather, isn’t it? How is veal selling to-day?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But look a-here, Vance, let me have the
-calf, anyway. You owe me that much,” the
-fat Bockus protested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All right. Send out for him, though,” said
-the cattleman.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It happened that Bockus despatched a youth
-with a pair of mules hitched to a wagon, for the
-calf. He was a wily urchin, and a glance satisfied
-him that Molly’s son could be taken from
-her only by craft. Accordingly he loafed all
-of one forenoon in the horse pasture with his
-wagon close at hand, and when the unsuspecting
-Jersey strayed off some hundreds of yards
-to secure better grazing, he made a sudden descent
-upon the white-face, locked his fingers
-about its nose so that the calf could not utter
-a sound, threw and tied him, then heaved the
-outraged victim into the wagon and made off.
-Molly returned shortly, and missing the apple
-of her eye, set out on a search of the immediate
-vicinity. In the distance a wagon raised the
-dust of the Blackwater trail, going rapidly.
-The boy did not feel any too secure even with a
-fence between them, and lashed his mules,
-shrilling oaths at the gawky beasts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cow brought up at the fence, every sense
-on the alert to detect the presence of the calf
-in the fast-disappearing vehicle. Some subtle
-intuition told Molly he was there, and she retreated
-a few steps. Then, with a crash, she
-went through the four strands of wire, and,
-with a long gash in her left shoulder dripping
-blood, started after them at a swinging trot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brother Ducey was conducting an open-air
-revival service among the mining population of
-Blackwater. He was a powerful exhorter,
-was the brother, and, as most of his congregation
-were women, with a sprinkling of men who
-would presently go on the night shift six hundred
-feet into the bowels of the earth, his picture
-of a lurid, living perdition had them swaying
-and rocking on the benches. Their groans
-and lamentations rolled up the street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re all a-going to hell!” he shouted.
-“Your feet are on the hot bricks now. Hell
-is--” And, again-- “Hell--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brother Ducey broke off and glared wrathfully
-at an imp of a boy who drove a clanking
-wagon at top speed completely around the
-meeting-place, making for the slaughter-house
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Molly arrived and took no such devious
-route. She went straight through the congregation,
-overturning the mourners’ bench, and,
-unable to differentiate between friends and
-foes, headed for the rostrum. Brother Ducey
-waved his arms wildly and squalled “Shoo!”
-But, as Molly would not “shoo,” he scaled a
-tree with the speed of a lizard, from which
-vantage-point he besought somebody to shoot
-the animal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Jersey did not pause to trifle with these
-hysterical worshipers. Her business was to
-find her baby, and she was almost up with him.
-In truth, the cow was an awesome sight as she
-charged anew after the wagon, the blood trailing
-from her shoulder, froth flaking her muzzle.
-Evidently the butcher’s assistant found
-her so.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t beat her to the gate!” he gasped,
-with a glance backward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whereupon he wheeled again and galloped
-his team in front of Bockus’ store. There he
-abandoned them, springing through the door
-just as Molly swept down the road. The calf
-bawled a greeting and the Jersey began to
-circle the wagon, occasionally prodding at the
-mules just to be on the safe side in the event
-of their having had anything to do with this
-theft. They kicked at her in return, but did
-not offer to run away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Somebody rope her! Somebody rope her!”
-Bockus cried, dancing up and down in his shop.
-“No, don’t shoot. Them locoed Tumbling
-K’s will wipe out the town if you do.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Alas, there was nobody in Blackwater competent
-to do it. They were a peaceful, industrious
-mining folk, and a cow was a dubious
-thing to them, to be handled respectfully in
-the best of moods. And an enraged animal
-like Molly! Blackwater suspended business,
-shut up shop, and hid indoors or took refuge
-on the roof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From time to time Molly abandoned the
-wagon temporarily to seek revenge where it
-might be given to her. In this way she made
-forays over half the town, and put Bill Terry,
-the postmaster, through a new plate-glass window
-that Tom Zeigler had imported at enormous
-expense. Tom swore that Vance would
-have to pay for it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Send for one of them fool cowboys!”
-Bockus screamed, after an hour of this.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His boy stole forth on an emaciated pony,
-and, eluding the cow by a burst of speed,
-brought Blackwater’s prayerful appeal to the
-Tumbling K headquarters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We rode in and roped Molly. Then certain
-of us did some trafficking with Bockus,
-Big John laying down the terms, with the result
-that the cord around the calf’s legs was
-loosed and he was restored to his mother.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All the blind savagery was departed from
-Molly now. She sauntered over to a patch of
-grass and began to eat, with the calf at her
-heels, and the stare she turned on the citizens
-of Blackwater was noncommittal, even kindly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her departure took on something of the
-character of a pageant. Brother Ducey was
-induced to make an oration--or he could not be
-restrained--at any rate, Brother Ducey delivered
-a speech setting forth the extraordinary
-qualities of the cow. It was really a remarkable
-tribute, but all the notice Molly took was
-to flick one ear as she masticated a bunch of
-grass.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And, brethern and sisters, what does this
-brave creature teach us? Hey?” he demanded,
-in conclusion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I dunno,” mumbled a gentleman at whom
-he was staring, in a hopeless tone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I ask you-all ag’in, what she done taught us
-when she come a-seeking of her young in the
-very heart of our meetin’? Why, it’s plain as
-the mole on Lon Rainey’s face,” cried Brother
-Ducey. “I forgive her a-chasing of me up
-that cottonwood,--it’s a right good thing it was
-so handy,--and Miz Ducey kin sew the pants.
-But what did this noble animal show? Jist
-what I was praying of you-all to reveal, brethern
-and sisters. She showed love and devotion,
-and a generous sacrifice for somebody else
-besides her own self. That’s what she done
-showed. You-all do likewise. Brother Perry
-will now pass the hat.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We took Molly back to the Tumbling K and
-turned her into the horse pasture. She came
-peaceably enough, six of us acting as escort of
-honor. She is there now, followed everywhere
-she goes by a husky red calf with a white face.
-Molly is firmly persuaded that he is her son and
-the pride of the range.</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chVII'></a>VII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE BABY AND THE PUMA</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The wagon jolted and whined over
-rough ground, winding among giant
-pines. Off to the right followed a
-tawny shape, flitting from blotch of shadow
-to screening bush, blending with the blurred
-outlines of tree and rock. The moon was hidden
-and Brother Schoonover drove with circumspection,
-lest his ark and all his possessions
-be wrecked in the wilderness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Doggone that moon. It ain’t never working
-when you need it right bad,” cried Brother
-Schoonover, cracking his whip. “That limb
-was like to blind me. Stead-ay, Glossy.
-Now, girl--now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The puma crouched flat on hearing the
-voice. Then the wagon drew out of sight beyond
-a tope of trees and he sprang to the
-shelter of a mesquite. There he peered again
-at the nester’s outfit going down the valley
-through the dark. It labored heavily; Brother
-Schoonover’s tones reached him, raised in sharp
-rebuke of the mare; and presently he slunk in
-pursuit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Don’t imagine that Bowallopus--such was
-he dubbed from that night of adventure--was
-stalking prey. Nothing was farther removed
-from his purpose. He was dreadfully afraid,
-but curiosity overrode fear! Time and again
-he halted to abandon the game and go about
-the serious things of life, but could not. The
-wagon and its inmates had him fast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bowallopus was not even hungry, but he
-trailed along in rear. Perhaps there lurked
-a sneaking hope far back in that hard skull of
-his that something might transpire toward the
-further easement of his stomach, but it never
-for a moment dulled his caution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The nester whistled at the mare and urged
-her forward, and twice the harsh scream of the
-brakes stayed Bowallopus rigid in his tracks.
-It should not be held against Brother Schoonover
-that he forgot on three occasions the Biblical
-limitations as regards profane words, because
-the night was deceptive and he was far
-from water. All he had on earth was with
-him there in the wagon, and he could descry no
-suitable place to camp. The family spring-bed
-was slung from ropes off the floor under
-the arched canvas top, and on it his wife slept.
-Curled warmly in the hollow of her arm was
-the baby. Sometimes the lurchings of their
-home rolled him quite away from her side, to
-return him on the rebound. He slept placidly,
-being a seasoned traveler.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Just before descending a gulch to cross a
-dried creek-bed, Brother Schoonover drove slap
-against a large rock, being now far off any
-trails. The wagon careened to the point of
-overturning and the baby slid from his mother’s
-arms. Mrs. Schoonover had raised the canvas
-for purposes of ventilation--she suffered
-from an affection of the lungs--and he shot
-downward through the hole. Being utterly
-helpless, he was unhurt. He hit the ground
-lightly and the wheel missed him a full half-inch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of course the shock woke the baby, but he
-was so astonished for a minute that he could
-only hold his breath ready for what might befall.
-When he did let out a yell, the wagon
-was thumping over the stones, with the driver
-standing up to beat the mare, and the couple in
-it could not have heard a steam calliope ten
-yards off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bowallopus vanished when the brown bundle
-dropped. A hundred paces and he halted in a
-thicket, arrested by a gurgling treble cry.
-The puma had seen children before, playing
-near the shack of a Mexican woodchopper, and
-he knew that note of distress. Very cautiously
-he crept back and began to circle.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The felidae steal upon their prey noiselessly, treading on
-the soft elastic pads of the soles of the feet, without risk of
-betrayal from the rustle caused by non-retractile claws.
-When within a short distance, they crouch and spring, bounding
-many times their length upon their unsuspecting victims,
-which, borne down by the descending weight of the fierce foe,
-are at once fastened upon by the deadly grip of the well-armed
-jaw and by the united action of eighteen fully-extended
-piercing claws.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So says an old school book--or it may be an
-ancient natural history--and it is very illuminating
-and authoritative. But it happens that
-Bowallopus belonged to a class of felidae
-which does not prey upon man or the children
-of men, and he did none of these things. He
-waited until the groaning of the wagon died
-away, his head up, keen for sound or sight of
-danger. A puma relies more on his ears and
-eyes than on his nose to apprise him of enemy
-or victim. Then he went forward stealthily,
-moving in a wide semicircle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The baby threshed about with his chubby
-arms and howled, whereat Bowallopus shrank
-back, hissing like an enraged gander, his tail
-lashing from side to side. Perhaps the threatening
-noise chilled the boy to silence; at any
-rate he broke off in his wail and lay quiet.
-The lion went nearer. He stood above the
-brown bundle, his muscles ready for combat or
-instant flight, and eyed it suspiciously. Much
-as a house cat would pick up a questionable bit
-of loot from the floor, Bowallopus seized the
-dress in his teeth and lifted the baby. Schoonover,
-Jr., waved a pudgy hand in lively terror
-and slapped the beast on the nose. Horribly
-surprised, Bowallopus dropped him and
-sprang back. Then he gathered himself to
-leap.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hi!” yelled Brother Schoonover.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lion snarled as he turned to flee, but
-the nester had stopped in his run and was down
-on one knee. Bowallopus cleared the distance
-between him and some brush with a magnificent,
-sinuous jump, but as he went, a crashing
-sound smote his ears and sharp burning pains
-ripped along loins and back. Brother Schoonover
-had loaded his old smooth-bore with bird-shot
-that day to the end that he might pot a
-dog-rabbit or a brace of wild doves for supper,
-and Bowallopus received the entire charge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Without paying the slightest heed to the
-fleeing puma, the nester threw down his
-weapon and clasped his son. Instantly the
-baby shrieked his loudest, and “God, he ain’t
-hurt a bit,” cried Brother Schoonover in a great
-voice. He was shaking like a cottonwood
-leaf and his fright impelled the child to further
-outcry, so contagious is fear. And now Mrs.
-Schoonover came running, unable to remain
-longer in the wagon with bone of her bone and
-flesh of her flesh lying helpless somewhere in
-the dark along the trail--she could see him
-dead. She prayed audibly as she ran.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Give him to me,” she said, snatching the
-baby from his sire as though he had been much
-to blame.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It weren’t my fault, Sally Jo,” he protested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You drive most awful reckless, Brother
-Schoonover,” returned his wife, and hugged
-her son closer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He ain’t hurt a mite. Just scared,” she announced,
-after a wondrous inspection by touch
-of hand. “Something done tore his dress.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A big ol’ line had him, Sally Jo,” the nester
-exclaimed. “I swan he was a monster. He
-went a-smashing up among the bushes and
-rocks.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You didn’t kill him? You done let him go
-and he most had eat our child?” shrilled Mrs.
-Schoonover.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon I done missed, Sally Jo. There,
-there, girl--it’s all right now. You cain’t hurt
-a line with birdshot. It won’t even tickle him.
-This here shot would bounce off’n a kitten’s
-hide, this here would.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They went back to the wagon, Mrs. Schoonover
-carrying the baby. The nester opined
-that he had had enough of driving for one
-night and they would camp here.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s hard on Glossy, but I’ll go find her
-water first thing in the morning”--he poked
-a finger playfully among his son’s ribs--“So
-that ol’ line was like to git you, boy? Ol’ Bowallopus
-was a-looking you over for a meal?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brother Schoonover hobbled the mare and
-they went to rest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bowallopus lay on a flat rock amid the lower
-ridges next day, sunning himself. He was not
-far from home and felt perfectly secure. In
-a gulch, washed out by floods numberless generations
-ago, was a large hole that led into a
-shallow cave. There was in front a sandstone
-ledge much to the beast’s liking, and here the
-puma resided, as a stinging odor proclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was very handsome, was Bowallopus.
-On his side, he measured eight feet ten inches
-from the tip of his nose to tip of tail, and his
-weight could not have been less than two hundred
-and forty pounds. Just now the superb
-richness of his reddish brown coat was marred
-by unsightly clots in the region of his rump, and
-he was constantly reminded thereof by a gnawing
-and itching of innumerable tiny spots.
-The irritation meant that the wounds were
-healing, but Bowallopus’s temper was very bad
-nevertheless. He licked his sores tenderly and
-settled himself to bask in the glare, lids drooping.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Five miles away, Brother Schoonover was
-digging with might and main into the side of
-a low hill, for he had found a spring bubbling
-from the rock and was now engaged in fashioning
-a dugout for a home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bowallopus went up the valley early that
-evening, being minded to kill. And before
-darkness closed down he arrived at a butte
-about three miles from his lair.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The huge cat crawled warily to a ledge and
-composed himself to wait. At the other side
-of the butte vague figures were moving, and
-Bowallopus could hear plainly the crisp munching
-of grass. These were the range mares
-wearing the Anvil brand, and he had taken toll
-of their young many times before. In the
-position he had selected they could not wind
-him; and along the base of the butte ran a trail
-down which the mares went to drink.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sun sank back of the mountains. A big
-roan stallion which ruled the band gave over
-eating and lay down to roll. Invigorated by
-this exercise, he whinnied joyously and started
-for the pool. One mare, with her colt, followed
-at his heels. The others began to
-close in, slowly, then in groups, until they
-were moving in loose array towards water.
-The leader picked the butte trail, paused to
-pull a tempting tuft, and rounded a bend.
-Then he snorted an alarm and swerved outward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bowallopus let him go--he was too formidable
-for attack--but the mare and her colt were
-below him. On the stallion’s warning he
-hurled himself downward, a yellow streak in
-the gloom, and bore the luckless colt to the
-ground. The crunch of its broken spine was
-drowned in the rumble of flying hoofs. Bowallopus
-gripped his prey by the neck and
-started homewards. Twice he was compelled
-to stop to obtain a fresh hold, but he dragged
-the carcass to the washout.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It happened that he made a foray early one
-evening to Wolf Creek in quest of a deer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sometimes, if he were exceedingly crafty,
-and wind and bough of tree were right, he
-could slay when a deer stole timidly to drink.
-Bowallopus went down the valley, alert and
-noiseless as was his wont. Suddenly he stiffened,
-the hairs on neck and back pringling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here was a fence. There could be no doubt
-of that. It was a very crude contrivance of
-one strand of wire, but he could see the posts
-standing in a ghostly, wavering line. Bowallopus
-walked along it, tensely expectant.
-In the distance a tiny light shone like a fallen
-star, and Bowallopus paused often to stare.
-This was the lantern in Brother Schoonover’s
-house. He had fenced a quarter-section, or
-had enclosed it sufficiently to conform with
-the law, and now occupied a one-roomed dugout
-constructed of logs and earth. The
-Brother was fully determined to prove up on
-this claim, and already indulged in dreams of
-how the place would look when green under
-Kaffir corn, and a red-roofed house on the hill
-back of them. He had longed all his life for
-a house with a red roof, for it could be descried
-so far and looked so cheery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The puma made the circuit of the place and
-watched and listened. Presently the light
-went out and all was still. He did not tarry
-long, being seized of a feeling of unrest. All
-heart for the hunt was gone from him and he
-struck northward, intent on putting distance
-between himself and this newest invader of his
-domain. While the dark was yet young, he
-scaled a pine tree--a tree bole was to the lion as
-greensward to the antelope--and sat comfortably
-on a thick limb. Once he tilted his nose
-and sent his screech vibrating to the topmost
-hills. It was a rending cry like the scream of a
-woman in mortal pain--no animal but a horse
-in its death agony can produce a sound more
-terrifying. After a while he descended and
-went northward once more; but there was no
-yowling from Bowallopus now. He had to
-find something to eat, and stealth alone could
-accomplish that end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet he was back at the fence next night and
-on many nights succeeding. The dugout and
-its dwellers recurred again and again to tempt
-his curiosity, however far he raided. Bowallopus
-had no desire to forage there, but he
-simply could not keep away. And gradually
-the feeling of anxiety over their presence became
-a fixed dread, an obsession.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brother Schoonover acquired a dog from a
-passing Mexican freighter and owned the mongrel
-for exactly seven days and six nights.
-Most of that period was spent by the canine
-back of the shack, tied to a post. Then he
-was released and ventured too far in the dusk,
-and Bowallopus gathered him in. When the
-nester found the remains he forgot all about
-the spirit of kindly charity for which he had
-been so strong in a two days’ debate with
-Brother Ducey in Texas, and railed against all
-created things save those man had domesticated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After this episode Bowallopus absented himself
-from the vicinity of the Schoonover home
-for a space. He went up into the mountains,
-where he contrived to get considerable veal and
-young beef. Winter was coming upon the
-land and a calf did not hug his mother’s side
-so closely of a night, being grown and prideful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the sheen of a late November gloaming,
-he dropped from a jutting rock on the rim of
-The Hatter and padded along a burro trail.
-This was the way down the big mountain which
-the woodchoppers took; thence they drove their
-patient beasts of burden seventy long miles
-to town. Bowallopus slunk beside the well-worn
-path, one eye cocked for trouble. He
-was ferociously hungry; his stomach clamored
-for food; and at sight of a scurrying jackrabbit,
-a peculiar pulsating ache started back of
-his jowl.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Abruptly he drew back and flopped downward
-behind a thorny bush. Below, on the
-shoulder of The Hatter, clung a shack of
-boughs and sod. A man was even then hammering
-on its roof, while a woman passed him
-up bits of old tin. Half way between the
-puma and the hut, a small boy was toiling
-under a pile of fagots, tied over his back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this Bowallopus saw, but what interested
-him most was an object nearer at hand. Not
-twenty feet away a Mexican baby played in
-the dirt, crowing with delight over possession
-of a captive lizard. The child was perhaps
-two years old and much too naked for that time
-of year, but she was hearty and cared naught
-for that. Her brother had brought her up
-the trail, leaving her to amuse herself as best
-she might whilst he gathered firewood. Naturally
-he forgot all about the toddler, the job
-not being to his liking.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bowallopus listened and watched and
-waited. The baby rolled in the dust. The
-man and woman were busily engaged and the
-boy had been sent to fetch a bucket of water.
-A bull-bat flew over the puma’s head. A hush
-crept over The Hatter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It may be that he shut his eyes when he
-launched himself and struck, though she was
-so very, very little. There was no cry to betray--only
-the throaty snarls of the puma,
-now turned mankiller and more horribly afraid
-and fearfully daring than he had ever been in
-his life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A big ol’ mountain line done eat a Mexican
-baby up yonder,” Brother Schoonover reported
-to his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You keep buckshot in that gun, Brother
-Schoonover; do you hear? Oh, my li’l’ lamb!
-What if that wicked lion had eat you up?”
-Her son did not appear at all disturbed by the
-speculation, but thumped on her breast with
-his fists.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a tremendous to-do up and down
-the country for eighty leagues. The manager
-of the Anvil offered a hundred dollars reward
-for the murderer’s hide and the cowboys of the
-region blazed away at every bobcat that
-showed a hair within their line of vision.
-Even Richter’s sheep herders bestirred themselves
-to set traps, but all to no avail. And
-the victim being a native child, the killing soon
-ceased to be a live topic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The winter arrived in the wake of a norther.
-It blustered for a fortnight, then set in to be
-bitterly cold. Bowallopus fared well, and grew
-ever more malignant and furtive. One rib
-was cracked owing to misjudgment of distance,
-but accidents are likely to occur to the
-best of hunters. In diving from a tree for
-the back of a colt, he missed and came down
-close to the mare. In a flash he gathered himself
-and leaped again, but the mother’s heels
-crashed full on his side and she went away at
-full speed, her son running a good second.
-On another occasion a young bull caught him
-with a headlong rush, unprepared on his kill,
-and would have made short work with so excellent
-a start, had not Bowallopus sought
-safety in the fleetness of his legs. He was a
-sapient animal and knew when he had enough.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Spring came at last, and Bowallopus had a
-fight. It was a family affair--his wife was
-not wholly blameless--and it is better for all
-concerned to say only that he came off the victor.
-A young puma had wandered into his
-ridges from the south and west, and he never
-went back. When a mountain lion does fight,
-it is worth going many miles to see.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some years it will rain so hard in this part
-of the cow country that the nesters can but sit
-and watch their puny efforts at raising corn
-seep away; but the cattle rejoice exceedingly.
-It must be admitted, however, that this happens
-extremely seldom. Generally the land
-bakes under cloudless skies from February to
-June and the earth opens in cracks, as though
-gasping for breath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Brother Schoonover broke his ground and
-planned to raise a bumper crop of corn, the
-signs being propitious. He made two trips to
-town, three days each way by wagon, in order
-to make all ready. Bowallopus used often to
-see him toiling long after sunset; the puma
-spent many hours of the dark in sinister vigil
-beyond the fence, where he could see the light
-burning steadily in the dugout. Again he
-would prowl completely around the claim,
-keeping always off the wire, for that solitary
-strand was associated with man. Once he
-topped the hill back of the home in late afternoon,
-though it was seldom he went abroad in
-daylight, and hid behind a boulder. The
-Schoonover baby was crawling near the door,
-on hands and knees. Bowallopus never once
-removed his gaze from him in a full hour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His own domestic affairs had progressed of
-late. Three sons had been born to his wife,
-who hid them on a day when she detected a
-certain glint in her lord’s eyes. Bowallopus
-discovered their hiding-place and slew the cubs
-and ate them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Rain should have fallen in June, but it did
-not. July passed, and the country quivered
-under a white ball that was the sun. The cattle
-gave up the hopeless fight. In the valley
-the air reeked of carcasses. Brother Schoonover
-finished a weary day in his waste fields in
-August, and said to his wife:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, Sally Jo, I reckon we’ll be moving
-agin.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no; don’t say so. Have we really got
-to go, Jed? We’re always moving. This is
-a right cruel country, ain’t it, Jed? Nowhere
-for a person to get along nice and quiet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He made no reply, but picked his son from
-the floor and set him on his knee. Then he
-stared out over his bare acres and began to
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t,” she entreated. “That’s awful. It
-ain’t so bad as that, Jed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ve done nothing but move for six years,
-Sally Jo. Or I reckon it’s nearer eight, counting
-them over in the Nations? And I made
-certain this place would do and we’d have a
-home.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Jed,” she said, putting a hand awkwardly
-on his shoulder. “Can’t we stay? Ain’t there
-no way? Perhaps you could get a job somewhere--with
-the Anvil boys. Oh, anything,
-so’s we don’t have to move again. It’ll be so
-soon now. I’ll never live through it, I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He eyed her anxiously, dandling the baby
-the while.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s one of the reasons,” he said. “You
-ought to be near where a doctor can be got
-handy, Sally Jo. No, we’ll have to give this
-up. I’ll take you back to my folks for the
-winter. We ought for to be there anyway.
-The ol’ man, he’s getting feeble, and first thing
-we know, he’ll be leaving that farm to Sam instead
-of me, Sally Jo. Cheer up, girl; we’ll
-find another place.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All right,” she returned hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two nights later they made camp among
-giant pines in the valley. The mare grazed
-near, hobbled to prevent her straying.
-Brother Schoonover lighted the fire and his
-wife cooked supper of bacon and bread and
-coffee. That must suffice until they reached
-town--and afterwards, more of the same diet,
-for the family treasury was down to eleven
-dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They washed the pots and tin plates, and
-put the baby to bed in the wagon. Then the
-couple knelt down and Brother Schoonover offered
-up a prayer. He always prayed to his
-Maker in a loud voice before retiring, invoking
-benedictions on the entire world and all the
-dwellers thereon. Only two exceptions did he
-ever make and he made those religiously--nothing
-could induce him to intercede for
-reigning monarchs, and he made special mention
-of the Republican party only that they
-might be excluded from the general benefits to
-accrue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When they were rising to their feet, Sally
-Jo clutched her husband’s arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s that, Jed? There--back of them
-mesquite.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I cain’t see nothing. Where?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t you see? Look along my finger.
-There, it’s moving again. It looks like a dog,
-Jed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her husband saw now and sucked in his
-breath. Off to the right a tawny shape flitted
-from blotch of shadow to screening bush,
-blending with the blurred outline of tree and
-rock.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hush,” he cautioned, tiptoeing to the
-wagon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reliable smooth-bore lay on the seat.
-Brother Schoonover slipped the shell out without
-a sound and put in another loaded with
-buckshot. That done, he lay down under the
-wagon and pretended to be asleep, but the gun
-protruded through the spokes of a wheel and
-the Brother occasionally sighted along the barrel.
-It was dark, but there was a pale glow
-from the stars, which would suffice for the work
-in hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When he gits in line with that pine tree,”
-he murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A mountain lion was circling the camp. He
-had stumbled upon the nester’s outfit by chance
-and had no business there, but curiosity beat
-down doubts and caution. He had glimpsed
-the baby near the fire and had cringed to earth
-momentarily. Now, he was the more eager.
-The sight of the couple on their knees and the
-man’s harsh tones drove him back a few yards,
-and he had inadvertently moved from shadow
-while one might count three; but now all was
-quiet. He lay in the gloom surveying the
-camp. The mare cropped the grass noisily
-on the far side and the puma determined to
-take a closer look over there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He emerged so eerily from nowhere that
-Brother Schoonover almost doubted his senses
-when he saw a head and neck between the
-sights in line with the tree. There was a flash
-and a terrific roar. Brother Schoonover was
-knocked backward by the kick of the gun, and
-his wife cried out. The baby awoke and
-squalled in affright.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The puma made a convulsive leap high into
-the air, hitting out blindly with his mighty
-paws. He came down with claws tearing into
-the earth, and whirled about and crouched to
-meet the unseen enemy. Mrs. Schoonover
-cowered in the wagon, covering the baby’s head
-with her apron that he might not hear the uproar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I got you, hey?” Brother Schoonover
-shouted, furiously elated. “Well, here’s another
-of the same kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He held the gun firmly against his shoulder
-and sent a charge straight between the eyes
-glaring at him like two living coals. The puma
-lurched forward and stretched out. He
-coughed once, his muscles jerking; then stiffened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the morning, a mountain lion lay on the
-edge of camp, his hide riddled with shot. Still,
-he was very handsome. He measured eight
-feet ten inches from the tip of his nose to tip
-of tail, and his weight could not have been less
-than two hundred and forty pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While his mother prepared breakfast and
-his father watered and harnessed the mare, the
-Schoonover baby inspected the creature. He
-pulled its ears and kicked it with fine deliberation
-on the point of the nose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you aim to leave it here, Brother
-Schoonover?” his wife asked, when they were
-ready to set forward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shore. The hide ain’t no good at this season.
-And he’s shot all to bits. Do you know,
-Sally Jo, I got a idea this is the same ol’
-mountain line what found our son? It’s like
-he’s the same one that eat the pore li’l’ Mexican,
-too, don’t you reckon? Ol’ Bowallopus?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It wouldn’t surprise me none,” she
-answered, and shuddered. Her husband
-spurned the carcass with his boot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They got under way. High up in the sky
-appeared two black specks. Brother Schoonover
-pointed to them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’ll rip him to pieces in no time. But
-we’ll keep the claws and whiskers and the end
-of his tail for the baby to play with. Hey,
-Sally Jo?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The specks grew larger. Soon they showed
-as birds, hovering on effortless wings above
-the camping ground. Brother Schoonover
-whacked the mare in high glee, and they set
-out again on their pilgrimage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before they had gone half a mile, the buzzards
-shot from the blue vault to earth.</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chVIII'></a>VIII<br/> <span class='sub-head'>THE MANKILLER</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All this happened in the Bad Year,
-which was not so many months ago.
-The outfit issued daily from their
-camps--riding bog, skinning cattle and driving
-in the helpless to the home pastures to be
-fed on oil-cake and alfalfa. The cows were
-walking skeletons, wild of eye, ready to wheel
-in impotent anger on their rescuers; or sinking
-weakly to the ground at the least urging,
-never to rise again. Every creek was dry.
-Springs that were held eternal became slimy
-mudholes and a trap. A well-grown man
-could easily step across the San Pedro, oozing
-sluggishly past mauled carcasses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wherever one rode he found bones of hapless
-creatures, or starved cows stretched flat on
-their sides, waiting for death to end their sufferings.
-And the flies settled in sickening,
-heaving clusters. Each mire held its victim.
-Wobbly-legged calves wandered over the
-range, crying for mothers that could never
-come. And the sun blazed down out of a pale
-sky.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even the saving mesquite in the draws and
-on the ridges was failing as sustenance; of
-grass there was none. The country lay bleak
-and gasping from Tombstone to the border.
-Not even a desert cow, accustomed to slake her
-water hunger by chewing cactus, could have
-long survived such blighting months. How
-we prayed for rain!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Manuel Salazar gave heed to the comet
-where he lay on his tarp, and crossed himself to
-avert the death-curse which was come upon the
-land. This weird luminary portended dire
-events and Manuel began, like a prudent man,
-to take thought of his religion. There might
-be nothing in religion, as Chico contended; but
-a man never knows, and it is the part of wisdom
-to be on the safe side.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, one evening, when the mountains were
-taking on their blue sheen and the beauty of
-these vast stretches smote one with a feeling
-akin to pain, Archie Smith rode up to headquarters
-and tossed a human hand on the
-porch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Found it in the far corner of the Zacaton
-Bottom,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jim Floyd recognized it at once by the triangular
-scar on the palm. The hand had
-been gnawed off cleanly at the wrist. Floyd
-wrapped the gruesome thing in a sack, wishful
-to give it decent interment when opportunity
-should offer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s ol’ man Greer’s,” he said. “You remember
-ol’ man Greer? He used to dig postholes
-for the Lazy L. Where’s the rest of
-him, Smith?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I aim to go and see. Ki-yotes eat him up,
-don’t you reckon, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It sure looks that way. Pore ol’ Greer--he
-could dig postholes right quick,” the boss
-answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What Archie found of the digger of postholes
-established nothing of the manner of
-death. Both arms were gone and wolves had
-dragged the body; hence, there was no real
-argument against the theory that old man
-Greer, who indulged a taste for <span class='it'>tequila</span>, had
-sustained a fall from his horse and had perished
-miserably within sight of the ranch. Yet
-Archie found this hard to believe. Wolves do
-not crush in the skull of a man, and it was the
-cowboy’s conviction that anyone could fall off
-Hardtimes, the digger’s mount, twice or thrice
-a day with no other injury than the blow to
-his pride.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two days later Manuel Salazar brought in
-Greer’s horse, shockingly gaunt and worried,
-and swelled as to the head. But what interested
-the outfit, when the saddle and bridle had
-been removed from Hardtimes, were long, parallel
-wales along neck and flank. Archie pronounced
-them to be the marks of a horse’s
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That don’t show anything. He wandered
-off and got into a fight with another horse,”
-Floyd asserted. “Yes, sir; it’s like that he
-done just that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After which he dismissed the unfortunate
-Greer from his mind. The outfit shook its
-head and expressed sorrow for the lonely
-digger, but opined that his fate surely went to
-show how injurious steady application to <span class='it'>tequila</span>
-could be, more especially in cruel weather.
-The Mexicans, and the nesters in outlying
-parts, were not satisfied with the explanation
-put forward. They discussed the mystery during
-protracted pauses in work and in the dark
-of the night. When two men met on a trail
-and halted to pass the time of day, old man
-Greer was the subject of talk. There were
-rumors of a snug fortune the digger had
-amassed and buried--sixty-six thousand dollars
-in gold, it was. Joe Toole, who made a
-nice, comfortable living by systematic theft of
-calves from the cattle company, did not hesitate
-to hint that Greer had died a victim to
-its professional gun-fighter for reasons best
-known to the rich corporation; but, then, Joe
-was prejudiced. Soon the death grew to a
-murder, and no man not of white blood would
-ride the Zacaton Bottom after nightfall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Tommy Floyd talked of these and other
-matters to his father as the boss was feeding
-Apache.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pshaw!” Floyd said contemptuously.
-“Don’t you put no stock in them stories,
-Tommy, boy. Some people in this here country
-can smell a skunk when they sight a dead
-tree.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But what do you guess killed him, Dad?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know, son. I sure wish I did,” was
-the troubled reply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He punched Apache in the ribs to make him
-move over. The huge jack laid back his ears
-and his tail whisked threateningly, but he gave
-place with an awkward flop, and Floyd
-laughed. Others might fear Apache, but he
-knew there was not the least particle of viciousness
-lurking in that hammerlike head. Of all
-the ranch possessions--blooded horses, thoroughbred
-Herefords and cowponies--he liked
-the jack best. It pandered to his vanity that
-others should avoid the monster, or approach
-him in diffidence, with suspicion and anxiety;
-and, in truth, Apache’s appearance was sufficiently
-appalling. Great as was his blue-gray
-bulk, it was dwarfed by the ponderous head;
-his knees were large and bulbous, and when he
-opened his mouth to bray, laying bare the powerful
-teeth, Apache was a spectacle to scare
-the intrepid. Horses would run at sight of
-him; an entire pasture would squeal with fear
-and flee on his approach. Yet there was not a
-gentler animal to handle in the million acres
-of the company’s range.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Toward the fag-end of a day Tommy was
-eating <span class='it'>panocha</span> on the steps of the porch, a
-favorite diversion with him. While removing
-some particles thereof from his cheek, in the
-region of his ear, he espied his father riding
-homeward from the Zacaton Bottom. Something
-in the way the boss swayed in the saddle
-brought Tommy’s head up alertly. Floyd was
-clinging to the horn and the reins trailed on the
-ground. The boy threw his crust away and
-ran to meet him. A dozen yards from the
-house the horse stopped, as though he knew
-that the end of the journey had come for his
-master.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That black devil, Tommy!” his father
-gasped, and lurched outward and to the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two of the boys came running and bore
-Floyd to his bed. That he had contrived to
-ride home filled them with wonder at his endurance
-and fortitude--nearly the whole of his
-right side was torn away, one arm swung
-limply, and there were ragged cuts on the
-head. Tommy hovered near, crying to him to
-open his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The boss never regained consciousness, and
-died at midnight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A Mexican doctor was summoned from a
-border village--his American competitor was
-off in the Dragoons, assisting at an increase to
-the population. After a minute examination
-the man of medicine announced that five ribs
-were broken. It was his opinion that Señor
-Floyd had met with an accident, from the
-effects of which he had passed away. Nobody
-was inclined to dispute this finding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Something done tromped him,” Dan
-Harkey asserted. “It’s like one of them bulls
-got into the Bottom and went for him when
-he got down to drink.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” said Archie positively; “a bull couldn’t
-have tore him up that way. It looks to me
-like teeth done that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Tommy awoke from the benumbed
-state in which he had moved since the tragedy
-and repeated his father’s dying words. They
-were very simple of interpretation. A black
-man had drifted into the country from eastern
-Texas, and lived, an outcast, on a place not fifteen
-miles from headquarters. It was well
-known that Floyd had had trouble with him,
-being possessed of an aggressive contempt for
-negroes, and twice had made threats to run the
-newcomer off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A nigrah could easy have beat him up thataway,”
-Dan declared. “A nigrah could do
-most anything. Yes, sir; he beat him to death--that’s
-what he done. It’s like he used that
-old hoe of his’n.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Word of the killing flew over the land in the
-marvelous fashion news is carried in the cow-country.
-Within twelve hours men knew of it
-in the most remote cañons of the Huachucas,
-and a party of nine set forth from headquarters.
-But somebody had carried warning, for
-the lonely hut was untenanted and the door
-swung loose on its rawhide hinges.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They buried Floyd on top of a hill where the
-wind had a free sweep, and piled a few stones
-atop. Tommy fashioned a cross out of two
-rough boards; and the boss sleeps there to-day.
-The sheriff was deeply stirred and had notices
-posted throughout the territory.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:0.5em;'>$250 REWARD</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For the arrest, dead or alive, of the man who brutally
-murdered James Floyd, boss of the Tumbling K, sixteen
-miles from here, some time yesterday evening. This man is
-supposed to be a negro; about forty years of age; black;
-about six feet in height and weighing close to two hundred
-pounds. Has a razor scar above the left ear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He has in his possession a .35 caliber autoloading rifle, No.
-5096, and a .32-30 pistol. He may be riding a sorrel horse
-with a roached mane, branded 93 on left hip.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This crime is one of the most dastardly in the criminal
-annals of the Territory, and I earnestly urge every officer
-and other person receiving this circular to do everything in
-his power to effect the capture of this human fiend.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The above reward is only a preliminary reward, which
-may be increased later to one thousand dollars, when the
-governor, with whom the matter will be taken up, is heard
-from.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wire me if any suspect is arrested, or if any information
-is obtained whatever concerning this negro, at my expense.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><a id='hut'></a></p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i245.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0007' style='width:75%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'>“<span class='it'>The lonely hut was untenanted</span>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two months passed, and nothing was heard
-or seen of the black man. The rains held off.
-North and east the ranges were deluged. A
-blight appeared to have fallen upon the Tumbling
-K. The land grew a shade grayer, the
-dust spurts whirled in gleeful, savage dance,
-and the cattle gave up the effort of living and
-lay down to die. All that the boys could do
-was to distribute salt and feed and work frantically
-to maintain the water supply. The
-emaciated brutes would eat of the oil-cake and
-hay, and sweat profusely on the nose, then
-stiffen out and expire with a sigh. Those that
-clung to life carried swollen under-jaws from
-the strain of tearing at the short grass.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Poor bastard!” Archie grunted, tailing up a
-cow he had already helped to her feet three
-times. “It fair makes a man sick at the stummick
-to see ’em. Here, you doggone ol’ she-devil!
-Why don’t you try for to help yourself?
-Up you come! That’s it; try to hook
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was no use. He shot her where she lay,
-and skinned her. Then, with the wet hide
-dragging at the end of a rope and her calf
-thrown over the fork of the saddle, he set out
-for headquarters. The orphan was a lusty
-youngster, and Archie made him many promises,
-accompanied by many strange oaths.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Li’l’ dogy,” he said, “I’ll find a mammy for
-you to-night if I have to tie up the old milch
-cow. Do you think you can suck a milch cow,
-dogy? Sure you can. Man alive, feel of him
-kick! He’s a stout rascal. You’ll be a fine
-steer some day, dogy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On a black-dark night flames leaped above
-the rim of the mountain, and the Tumbling K
-were roused from bed to go forth with wet
-sacks, and rage in their hearts, for the scum of
-humanity who would fire a range. Twenty-six
-hours in the saddle and six more fighting the
-leaping, treacherous enemy; then two hours of
-sweating sleep on saddle-blankets beside their
-hobbled horses, and back a score of miles on
-desperate trails for fresh mounts--three separate
-times they beat out the blaze with sacks
-and back-firing. Once more, rising heavy-lidded
-and dripping from the stupor of utter
-exhaustion, they saw it licking hungrily
-through the Gap. No unlucky cigarette-stub
-thrown amid parched grass, no abandoned
-campfire, had done this. It was the deliberate
-work of an enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Orders came to move the cattle down into the
-valley, lest they perish to the last horn, to the
-last torn hoof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’ll take you three days to move ’em ten
-miles,” the manager said; “but never mind.
-Ease ’em. Ease ’em careful. The man who
-yells at a cow, or pushes her along, gets his
-time right there. The only real way to handle
-cattle is to let ’em do what they want and work
-’em as you can. Think that over, boys.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Manuel Salazar remembered this warning as
-he moved his tired horse at a snail’s pace behind
-a bunch of sick ones in the Zacaton Bottom.
-Manuel made twenty dollars a month with consummate
-ease, working only seven days in the
-week and only thirteen hours a day; and he
-would not throw his job away lightly. Therefore
-he permitted the gaunt cows to straggle
-as pleased them, humming to himself while they
-nibbled at tufts here and there. If one turned
-its head to look at him it fell from sheer weakness;
-therefore he held aloof. So the sad procession
-crept along.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was in Manuel’s mind to save a mile by
-moving the bunch through the horse pasture.
-He put them through the gate with no trouble
-and was dreamily planning how he might steal
-back a hair rope Chico had stolen from him,
-when the quirt slipped out of his fingers. The
-vaquero got down to pick it from the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hi! Hi!” he yelled in panic, and ducked
-just in time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A black shape towered above him, striking
-with forefeet, reaching for the nimble Manuel
-with its teeth. Its mouth yawned agape; Salazar
-swore he could have rammed a lard bucket
-into it. The vaquero swerved from under the
-deadly hoofs and hit out blindly with the quirt.
-The stallion screamed his rage for the first time
-and lunged at him, head swinging low, the lips
-flicking back from the ferocious teeth. Manuel
-seized a stone, put to his hand by the blessed
-saints, and hurled it with precision, striking the
-horse on the nose. Midnight blared from pain
-and shook his royal mane in fury, but the
-shock stayed him and Salazar gained his horse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now,” he yelled, pulling his gun and
-maneuvering his mount that he might be
-ready to flee, “come on, you! You want to
-fight? That’s music to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Midnight did not want to fight. He
-had employed craft in stealing upon the man,
-and now he moved off sulkily, the whites of
-his eyes rolled back, a thin stream of blood
-trickling from his muzzle. Salazar longed to
-shoot holes through his shiny black hide, but
-contented himself with abuse instead. Was
-not the stallion worth five thousand dollars?
-Who was he--Manuel, a poor vaquero--to be
-considered in the same thought with so noble a
-beast?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Tommy,” he said as he unsaddled at headquarters,
-“I’ve found who killed your pore
-father. Yes, and old man Greer, too. Don’t
-look so pale, Tommy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Tommy stalked into the manager’s office next
-forenoon, a very solemn and very determined,
-if a short and somewhat dirty figure. He was
-white under his freckles, and he talked through
-his teeth, jerkily, his eyes fixed unwaveringly
-on the manager’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Midnight!” the manager exclaimed.
-“Nonsense! Why, he wouldn’t harm a fly.
-That horse would never kill a man. He’s
-worth five thousand dollars. Since we got him
-from Kentucky, two years ago, a woman could
-handle him, Tommy, boy. Salazar must have
-been teasing him. You’ll have to look somewhere
-else, Tommy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mean you ain’t going to do nothing,
-Mr. Chalmers?” Tommy asked in a dry voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course not. Midnight? Impossible.
-Why, that horse is worth five thousand dollars.
-He couldn’t have done it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Tommy went back home very slowly. That
-night he sat beside Manuel’s candle and cleaned
-and oiled a sawed-off .25-30 rifle, inherited
-from the man who slept on the hill. Salazar
-smoked lazily and watched him through drooping
-lids. The boy finished his task and leaned
-forward on the stool, staring at the tiny flame,
-the weapon across his knees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of what avail to shoot Midnight? Of
-course it would be easy. Tommy had acquired
-some degree of skill by blowing the
-heads off chickens whenever any were desired
-for the dinner-table, and he felt assured that at
-two hundred yards he could pick off the stallion
-with one pressure of his finger. It would
-be mere child’s work to distinguish Midnight
-from the mares, even on the murkiest night.
-But, after all--had the stallion done the killing?
-He had only Manuel’s experience and
-suspicions to go on. Moreover, if he took
-punishment into his own hands they might
-throw him into a jail. Midnight was worth
-five thousand dollars: assuredly Mr. Chalmers
-would cast Tommy out into the world to shift
-for himself. He put the rifle back under his
-bunk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Very discreetly Tommy entered the horse
-pasture at sunup--he had been unable to sleep
-for scheming--and made his way down the
-mile-long fence toward the corner where the
-mares usually grazed at that hour. He had a
-six-shooter in his pocket for an emergency, but
-he hoped that he would not use it. Midnight
-sighted him and stood rigid a full minute,
-twenty paces in advance of the mares, gazing
-at the boy. He was a regal animal; Tommy
-thought he had never seen so glorious a horse.
-Then the stallion advanced with mincing steps,
-his head bobbing, the ears laid back. He
-sidled nearer, without haste, whinnying softly.
-The boy waited until he was a dozen feet distant,
-then threw himself flat and rolled under
-the barbed-wire fence. With a rending scream
-Midnight reared and plunged for him, his forefeet
-battering the ground where Tommy had
-fallen. He tore at the earth in discomfiture
-and wrath, and raved up and down on the
-other side of the fence, his nostrils flaring, his
-eyes a glare of demoniacal hate. Tommy surveyed
-him in deathly quiet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The dark came warm, with puffs of hot
-wind, so that the Tumbling K men reviled the
-discomfort joyously, since it presaged rain.
-So long as the cold nights endured there could
-be no relief. Tommy slipped from the bunkhouse
-for a breath of air, though it was past
-bedtime and they had told him to turn in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Apache!” he called in a low tone, gliding
-into the stall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The jack cocked his monstrous ears and listened,
-knowing well the voice. Tommy put a
-halter over his head and opened the stall door.
-It was gnawed and scarred by Apache’s teeth
-and hoofs, and the boy wrenched it from the
-hinges and laid it aslant on the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You done bust your way out, Apache,”
-he whispered. “You hear me, you ol’ devil?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He led him out into the corral and thence
-into the lane, talking softly as they went.
-Apache raised his nose and sniffed of the wind.
-When they reached the horse pasture the boy
-tore out the strands of wire at a spot near the
-corner of the fence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You was fond of my Dad, wasn’t you,
-Apache?” Tommy quavered, working with
-nervous fingers to unbuckle the halter. “Then
-go to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The jack required no bidding. He
-wrenched free and stepped carefully over the
-wire into Midnight’s domain. Apache never
-did anything in ill-judged haste. A blur, two
-hundred yards off, attracted him and he headed
-toward it eagerly. A moment, and he
-stopped; then went forward with caution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Midnight had seen him coming. He trotted
-out from his band of mares and halted expectantly.
-Next instant he had recognized
-Apache for what he was, and shrilled a challenge.
-The jack brayed like a fiend and went
-forward slowly to meet him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now, a capable jack can whip any stallion
-that ever breathed. It is really an education to
-watch a jack like the mighty Apache fight.
-There exists the same difference between
-the methods of a stallion and a jack as between
-those of a nervous amateur boxer and the seasoned
-champion. A jack has no fear that anyone
-can detect, and is practically insensible to
-pain. One can see at a glance what an advantage
-this gives him over an opponent with any
-lingering predilection for longevity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Also, a jack never fights for glory, never
-fights for the gallery. His sole object is to
-win. Wherefore, no idle and frivolous prancing
-about for him--no swift rush in, a blind
-striking with hoofs, a tearing with the teeth,
-then out again. A jack is not constructed that
-way. Fighting is a business--a serious, albeit
-a pleasurable, business; and he attends to that
-side of it with passionate singleness of purpose.
-He will watch his opportunity with the alert
-coolness of the professional, wasting not an
-ounce of energy. When the opening comes he
-goes to it like the stroke of a rattler, gets his
-grip and shuts his eyes and hangs on. There
-is considerable of the bulldog in a jack, and if
-he is to be gotten off at all, one must pry him
-off with a crowbar; in fact, next to a Shetland
-stallion, which is the darlingest little fighter
-that ever tore at an enemy’s ribs, nothing more
-instructive can be witnessed than a full-sized
-jack in a fair field and no interruptions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Apache had fought before--many, many
-times. Therefore he made for the foe with
-circumspection, his head jerking sideways, his
-tail tucked, ears laid flat on his neck, and his
-feet barely touching the ground, so lightly did
-his tense muscles carry him. One evil eye
-measured the giant horse with venomous composure.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Vastly different was Midnight’s attack.
-The stallion had pluck to spare, but his temper
-was overhasty and his skill slight. Rage forever
-clouded his judgment in encounter. He
-had learned only one plan of battle and that
-was to rush and bear down his opponent.
-There was his rival. He would kill him.
-Midnight’s was a simple creed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His harsh scream rent the night silence, and
-the fight was on. Another horse would have
-circled so formidable an adversary in an endeavor
-to create an opening, but the black’s
-temper was too imperious for delay. Straight
-was his rush. He bore down on the jack at
-the top of his speed, his wonderful, supple body
-a-quiver with eagerness and anger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then Apache did a remarkable thing--a
-thing almost human in ingenuity. What Apache
-didn’t know about fighting is best forgotten.
-Swerving ever so slightly as the black
-came, he lunged to meet him, crashing shoulder
-to shoulder with all the strength of his tough
-sinews behind the impact. Hit sideways,
-taken off his balance, the force of Midnight’s
-own charge contributed to his overthrow.
-Down he tumbled, scrambling with his feet as
-he fell. Before his body touched the ground,
-the jack whirled and lashed with both heels into
-his sides. With the same appalling speed,
-Apache drove for the throat of his prostrate
-enemy, secured his grip and shut his eyes,
-wrenching frenziedly from side to side and upward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is well not to tell further what Apache
-did to the mankiller. A jack has about as
-much sense of mercy as he has of fear, and
-he has never been taught any rules of warfare.
-When he gets his enemy where his enemy
-would like to get him, he does his utmost to obliterate
-him from the face of the earth. So it
-was that next day the Tumbling K men were
-barely able to recognize the Kentucky stallion
-in the torn, broken, black pulp they found in
-the horse pasture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All night long Apache brayed and screeched.
-The noise of his triumph would set a soul to
-quaking. It pierced Manuel’s dreams and he
-muttered in his sleep a prayer for protection
-from the Evil One. The jack pranced around
-and around his victim, and up and down the
-pasture, wild with the joy of battle, magnificent
-in his superb strength and the pride of victory.
-Toward dawn he abandoned the carcass and
-drove off the terror-stricken mares as the just
-spoils of the conqueror.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Big white clouds boiled up back of the mountains
-that afternoon, with a stiff wind from the
-southeast behind them; and at sunset the heavens
-opened of their blessed treasure. Manuel
-and Tommy lay in the bunkhouse listening to
-the thunder of rain on the sod roof. A burro
-came to the door and poked his patient head
-inside, seeking warmth and a friendly dry
-spot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come in!” cried Manuel cheerily. “Take
-a chair. Tommy, give him your bed. Ain’t
-that music, though? Hark! Oh, the cattle!
-Can’t you see them soaking in it, boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A yellow mongrel ousted the doubtful burro
-from the doorway and began nosing about for
-a place to rest his uneasy rump. The roof was
-leaking in strong, hearty streams, and Salazar
-sprawled on his back, letting the water run on to
-his chest. He was smiling placidly. Tommy
-snuggled into the blankets and pictured to himself
-a new land of much grass, and clear-eyed,
-contented cows and high-tailed calves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The curse is lifted,” Manuel observed
-piously. “Yes, sir. The dear God sent the
-jack to kill that stallion. How else could it
-be? What do you think, Tommy, boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon so,” said Tommy.</p>
-
-<div><h1><a id='chIX'></a>IX<br/> <span class='sub-head'>NEUTRIA</span></h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My name is Neutria. It means
-Beaver, and they gave it me because
-I tuck my tail. Nobody but Chappo
-ever called me a pretty horse, but Chappo once
-said in my hearing that my ugly roan hide covered
-more beauty than all the girls of Sonora
-possessed; and Chappo really knew everything
-worth knowing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was not my first master. There was another,
-to speak of whom is pain--a tall man,
-with only one eye, and a long, sandy mustache,
-stained of the tobacco he chewed perpetually.
-This person owned my mother and
-we lived in a small pasture among the lesser
-hills of the San José range. What he did to
-sustain life was never quite plain to us, because
-the land he held remained uncultivated
-and he spent much time by himself in his dirty
-shack, drinking from a demijohn which he
-kept hidden under some sacks in a corner.
-Oftentimes he would come from his drinking
-and drive us into a corral he had constructed of
-ocatilla. There he would beat my mother, and
-chase us about and about. I was very young
-then and he spared me. She was terribly
-afraid of him, and whenever he roared at her,
-even though it was in the sixty-acre field, where
-he could be evaded, she fell to trembling and
-would walk falteringly to the halter he held
-out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were nights when he forgot us entirely
-and left us in a small wooden pen, without
-anything to eat or drink. Occasionally a calf
-was dragged up and shoved in with us, and it
-would bawl for a day and a night for the
-mother from whose side it had been torn.
-After a while he would brand the little creature
-with his own mark of the inverted pitchfork.
-In this manner he gathered a respectable
-bunch of cattle, though I know of two
-cows only which he ever bought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is not the place to tell how he broke me
-to the saddle. He made me obey him, but he
-did not break my spirit, even though my sides
-were bloody from his savage anger. Although
-Sloan branded all else he could get, on me he
-never put the iron.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What for you haven’t got the Pitchfork on
-that li’l’ horse, Sloan?” a cowboy asked him
-one day at Buzzard’s Feast.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He don’t need it, this hoss don’t. He’s so
-doggone ornery nobody’d steal him,” said my
-master.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Later I heard the other--a roaring, swaggering
-boy, with a kind eye and soothing hands--tell
-a friend that the only animal Sloan did
-not brand was the one which he owned legally.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Whenever the strength was in me, I fought
-him. He was a powerful man, with a punishing
-knee-grip and a poise that was almost unshakable,
-whatever his condition. But oppression
-begets cunning, and ride as he might, there
-were times when I could hurl him off. If a
-horse take thought when he starts his pitch, instead
-of bucking in blind, raving anger, there
-is a chance that he will have the victory. I
-mastered a trick of rocketing straight into the
-air and whirling about back under the rider,
-before my feet touched the ground. This is
-difficult, but imparts a really terrific shock;
-even Sloan could not withstand it. Of course
-he would beat and spur me almost to death
-when he was able to walk again. If that
-method of fighting him failed, there was another,
-dangerous to horse and rider alike. I
-would rear high, with my head thrown back,
-whereupon Sloan would kick his feet free of
-the stirrups lest he be caught under me when I
-toppled. Then, before he could recover, my
-head would shoot down between my forelegs
-and once more I would go to pitching. It was
-very efficacious, this stratagem, and the pleasure
-of it was much enhanced if the ground was
-rocky or there were cactus and mesquite into
-which he could be flung.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In spite of the endless cruelty to which
-Sloan subjected me, he taught me much.
-Whatever else he might be, he was a cowman;
-but he knew and practiced a lot that no honest
-cowman should know. Sometimes he would
-reverse the shoes on my feet that the impress
-on the ground might appear to be a trail leading
-in the opposite direction to his line of travel.
-He rode much at night, so that I became expert
-at picking my way down rock-cluttered
-declivities in the blackest of the dark. Once
-when he fled before a body of horsemen which
-had discovered three calves hogtied in a box
-cañon, I managed to distance them. Thereupon
-he alighted and muffled my hoofs with
-gunny-sacks, that he might follow a stony
-creek-bed without sound.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Damn, but you kin climb out when you
-want to,” he said grudgingly, when we were
-safe at home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Because I learned quickly and never forgot,
-Sloan held his hand from killing me in any of
-his outbursts of rage. At least a dozen times
-did he tie me fast to a snubbing-post and belabor
-my head and neck and ribs with a stout
-club, until I grew sick from pain and my glazing
-eyes warned him that he had touched the
-limit of my endurance. Then he would desist,
-for I was of value to him. These fits of
-frenzy were occasioned by the most trifling
-happenings. Perhaps when he came to drive
-in my mother and me, we did not move fast
-enough--she was growing very old--or she exhibited
-a too great fear. Then he would rope
-us and proceed to torture until his temper
-waned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I come now to the time he killed my mother
-and I won a brief freedom. The weather had
-been murderously hot. From January to July
-no drop of rain fell and our hills grew sullenly
-naked and brown. Sloan’s spring ceased its
-flow. He did not discover that for two days,
-being stupefied, and we were terribly wasted
-when he turned us out to find water for ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no grass. The earth showed
-gray as the rocks and as bare, and the rocks
-gave back the heat in shimmering waves.
-Where the ground had cracked under the sun,
-giant fissures gaped for the feet of the unwary.
-Five miles from home we saw some
-cows stumbling hopelessly out of a cañon and
-learned that there, too, the water had failed.
-Their dried skins drew tight over their bones
-and the panic of desperation glared from their
-eyes. One prodded at my mother as we
-passed, refusing to give place as cattle do to
-horses, then sank weakly to the ground.
-Later she stretched out on her side, and we
-knew that the end was near.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turkey buzzards strutted everywhere,
-gorged to apathy. They would cluster on a
-carcass, unwinking and insolent, and watch us
-nosing in quest of a bite to eat. Fires had ravaged
-the lower ridges, and trees and brush were
-stripped clean. To remain here meant slow
-death, and we fared higher.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We met with cattle on the upper slopes,
-spent and picking their path with care. A
-heifer slipped and rolled downward almost beneath
-our feet. There were many orphan
-calves, bawling impotently against echoing
-cañons’ walls, and carrion-crows hung soundlessly
-in flocks, their shadows flitting swiftly
-over the earth in front of us. We came on
-the body of a horse at a dried waterhole. He
-had plunged from a ledge in his exhaustion, to
-die helplessly in sight of the place he sought.
-Crows had torn out the eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But I would not let my mother become disheartened.
-All these creatures were moving
-downward, and some propelling force has always
-driven me upward in time of stress. So
-I led her far among the peaks. It was desolate
-enough, of a certainty--so barren that my
-poor, tottering mother wanted to go back,
-though she knew well that the homeward
-stretch was beyond her strength--but I urged
-her forward.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We came at last to four peaks, away up in
-those mountains, and threading a defile,
-emerged into a cuplike draw among them; and
-there were mesquite in profusion and many
-green things. And more precious than all, a
-tiny spring bubbled behind a boulder at the
-north end. It would not water more than four
-head, but it sufficed, and we tarried on its edge
-all of one evening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For forty days we stayed in our random
-home and gained in flesh and in strength.
-Then, one hot, sticky evening, great banks of
-mist surged upward and massed around our beloved
-peaks, and the rain broke from the press
-and drenched the hills. We turned our backs
-to the driving torrents, clamped our tails and
-let the cool water soak into our crackling hides.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What a difference in the land when the sun
-showed again, clear and warm! It was as a
-dead thing come to life. Tender shoots thrust
-their heads above the hard ground; the trees
-stopped their complaints, and nodded and
-rustled jauntily to a southwest breeze, for the
-sap stirred within them and soon they would
-put forth new leaves. A ground squirrel
-emerged from a hole, blinked impudently at
-us, and then dashed off across the rocks, reckless
-from sheer joy of being alive. We sniffed
-of the good, fresh wind and headed for the
-lower reaches, for there would be rare grazing
-now that the rains had washed the valleys.
-Thus we came to live close to our old home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sloan came riding on an October day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Crackee, but you two is fat,” he shouted
-gleefully.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had a new horse, a high, long-backed
-sorrel with the legs of a racer. I knew the
-breed,--a steel-dust valley horse, built for
-speed and helpless as a wagon among our
-crags. Sloan drove us in and got down to put
-a halter on the mare.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My mother had never concealed her dread
-of him. It moved him always to an excess of
-fury, but she had learned terror in youth and
-it held her through all her years. Now she
-snorted, her limbs a-tremble, and drew back.
-The sweat stood out on her muzzle and dyed
-her neck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What,” Sloan bellowed, “you ol’ she-devil,
-you ain’t learned to quit dodging yet? Then,
-by God, I’ll learn you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He swung a breast-yoke with all his force,
-smashing my mother squarely between the
-ears. The mare gave a moan, a long sigh, and
-sank slowly to the ground, the eyelids flickering.
-I saw her legs stiffen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He kicked her where she lay and started for
-me, but I rushed by him, lashing with my shoeless
-heels as I went. They caught him full in
-the chest. I can hear yet the grunt he gave
-at the impact; then over he went.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had put up only two bars of the corral
-gate. I took them with a rush and headed for
-the high hills. Sloan scrambled to his feet,
-coughing and swearing, and ran to the sorrel.
-In the saddle, he fired twice, but though the
-bullets slashed the ground ahead of me, I never
-wavered. He let out a shout and spurred
-after, making ready his rope as he came. It
-made my blood dance to see these futile efforts.
-For a valley horse is to a mountain horse as a
-house kitten is to a wild-cat. It is true that an
-exceptional valley horse, if turned loose in the
-hills young enough, may in three years’ time
-develop into a fair mountain pony--with good
-schooling, that is. Even then he will lack
-something of our depth of chest and perfection
-of feet. But put a valley horse, green,
-in the mountains, and he will stand and shiver
-and sweat, not daring to venture. So I was
-elated when Sloan came pounding behind,
-knowing full well that the sorrel could never
-follow where I would lead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The chase led up a rocky cañon filled with
-post-oak, along a mesa, through a gap, skirted
-a summit, and dipped downward into another
-cañon. Now we were straightened out for my
-familiar peaks. Suddenly I became aware that
-the pursuers had dropped back, and, easing in
-my run, I saw Sloan beating the sorrel over the
-head with his rope. He was ever thus, blaming
-his mount on the least excuse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two days and a night I fled. Of course it
-was necessary to pause for a few hours to eat
-grass and to drink, but fear of Sloan kept me
-moving. I struck south, then westward.
-Fences delayed my flight considerably in the
-valleys, but I had had experience with them,
-and roamed along until I discovered a spot
-where the wires were partially down and could
-be jumped, or until I found a watergap. I
-suppose I covered one hundred and sixty
-miles, but not all in a straight line by any
-means, and at sundown of the second day I
-was in a goodly range of hills. Here I rested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A band of bronchos wandered into a draw
-where I fed that night, and I joined them.
-We roved where we willed, and the rain fell
-abundantly and the grass was green and plentiful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Why is it one can never be entirely happy?
-If one be breast-high in succulent zacaton, a
-fly will mar the feast. I have observed a mare
-in a field of alfalfa, neglecting what she could
-have without effort, to stretch unavailingly
-through the fence after a tuft of tough Johnson-grass;
-in fact, I have done that myself.
-Here was I with millions of virgin acres in
-which to wander; all I could eat; agreeable
-companions. Yet I pined to hear a man’s
-voice. That sounds inexplicable, but it is the
-truth. Even Sloan’s harsh bass tones would
-have been welcome, after six months of freedom.
-Man’s companionship had been bred in
-me, and though his presence might bring terror,
-yet I longed for it, and the master-grip
-of his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Winter passed and the long, dry season
-opened in a blaze of heat. A horseman bore
-down on us one day, from the south, and we
-massed swiftly for escape. Within a mile,
-two more riders appeared, and my companions
-increased their pace to a gallop. Only
-I, of all the band, knew what this meant. The
-others were bronchos who had never felt the
-rope and they ran blindly, ignorant of the cordon
-closing in from every direction. But I
-was cleverer. Suddenly darting from the
-herd, I sped within sixty feet of a cowboy--not
-close enough for his loop--and gained the
-mouth of a cañon. Up this I spurted, the
-rider in hot chase.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How often are pride and conceit confounded.
-The cañon narrowed--narrowed to
-sheer walls fifty feet apart--and there ahead
-of me, blocking my path, was a cliff of red-streaked
-rock. Water trickled down its face.
-That much I perceived, and then it rushed
-upon me that the race was run. I turned short
-about and tried to go by him as I had passed
-Sloan, but he threw his rope and caught me
-cleanly. Sloan had taught me the lesson of
-the rope--taught it in bitter vindictiveness--and
-I followed my captor without struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Done got a maverick,” he announced, when
-he rejoined his comrades.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s been rode before, Chappo,” another
-said. “Look at the way he follows. And
-there’s been a cinch sore on his left side.
-Look.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I cain’t see it,” Chappo said obstinately.
-“He’s a maverick, I’m a-telling you. And he’s
-my horse, because I done found him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he had me in the corral at headquarters,
-Chappo walked fearlessly to my head.
-Of course I began to quiver, for well I knew
-what this portended.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You pore son-of-a-gun,” he muttered, and
-stopped. “So he done beat you over the
-haid?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He scratched my ears and rubbed my head
-lightly between the eyes. All the while, he
-talked to me in a low tone, with a sort of laugh
-behind it. Chappo was a small man, no higher
-than a fence post, but there was something in
-his touch that made me fear and yet want him
-to keep on rubbing. When he attempted to
-put the bridle on, I stood rigid, expectant.
-Surely the beating would come now. It did
-not. Instead, he said, “You ol’ rascal, you,”
-and jabbed me in the ribs with his thumb.
-Now, here is a curious thing. A man can jab
-you with his thumb so that it hurts, and he
-can jab you in the same place with the same
-force and it will only tickle pleasantly. Everything
-depends on the spirit in which it is
-done. Chappo’s thumb was very agreeable
-and I laid back my ears and pretended to nip
-at him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll top you,” he said, “and then I’ll put the
-Box C on you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It amused me vastly to hear this mite of a
-man tell so confidently how he would ride me,
-when even the terrible Sloan could not keep
-the saddle at times. Just to scare him, I
-bowed my back when he slapped the blanket
-on. Then I rolled my eyes backward to note
-the effect. He was grinning, actually grinning--and
-his hat did not show above my
-withers. Next, he threw on the saddle, and
-the curve in my spine was unmistakable; but
-he merely hummed a tune and began to cinch
-me tightly, with careless freedom, just as if
-we had been friends all our years. It surprised
-me so much that I suffered his impertinence
-in quiet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There were some cowboys on the fence,
-watching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Want me to ear him, Chappo?” one asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No-oo. Me and him’s friends already.
-Ain’t we?” He made me walk a few steps,
-still grinning as he inspected the significant
-upward tilt of the saddle. “Look at his tail,
-boys. We’ll shore have to call him Beaver.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Call him Neutria,” one cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My new master nodded and then stood directly
-in front. I tried to look away, but his
-eyes drew mine in spite of me, and when he
-backed off, I followed, though he exerted no
-pressure on the bit. There was nothing hard
-and there was nothing mean in those eyes; a
-devil lurked in Sloan’s. Chappo’s were clear
-and very good-natured, yet oddly compelling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s all right,” he said. “Now we know
-each other, me and you, Neutria.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He pulled my head around by the cheek of
-the bridle and next moment was atop. I remained
-motionless. The grip of his knees was
-curiously at variance with his bulk: somehow
-that grip raised a doubt in my mind that I
-could shed him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next second I was pitching, more from force
-of habit than from any wish to hurt this youth.
-What was the matter? No spurs gored my
-sides; I felt no sting of quirt. Instead,
-Chappo merely swayed in the saddle and he
-whooped me on to further effort, hitting my
-shoulders gleefully with his hat. This was
-too much--a wight of one hundred and twenty
-pounds to make game of me! I paused for
-breath and to gather strength.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hey, you ain’t quitting?” he inquired.
-“Wipe her up, li’l’ feller. Fly at it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After that it was imperative I should do my
-best--Sloan could never have kept his seat
-when I let myself loose to his challenge.
-Every trick his brutality had taught me I employed,
-and only once did Chappo waver. He
-was riding on his spurs now, yet he had to grab
-desperately for the horn; but he righted himself
-with a laugh and renewed his yelling. At
-last I was compelled to stop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re shore a dandy, Neutria,” he panted.
-“Let’s call it an even break.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That suited me admirably. It would have
-been a shame to injure the boy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I never pitched with Chappo again. He
-was always kind to me, save once only. That
-was when he placed the Box C on my left hip
-with a red-hot iron. It pained horribly, but
-I realized that all horses had to go through this
-ordeal and that Chappo did not mean to be
-brutal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What times we had that summer and autumn!
-It was a year of frequent rains, and
-horses and cattle were sleek and fat and rollicking.
-Chappo and I would go out from
-camp twice each week and prowl the mountains
-the livelong day. Perhaps a long-eared calf
-would be roused up--he is one that has escaped
-branding--and my master would settle himself
-and take down his rope even as I flashed
-in pursuit, over rocks and brush, down cañons’
-sides, up cliffs, shooting through defiles. It
-is something to be a mountain horse, though it
-is I who say it; no other horse in the world
-could have carried Chappo at full speed where
-I carried him after mavericks. And he never
-faltered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wherever you put your doggone feet is
-good enough for me, Neutria,” he said once, at
-the bottom of a perilous descent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Chappo was an excellent cowhand, more
-skilled than Sloan. He would seldom miss a
-throw in the wildest country, and when he had
-the calf roped, down he would jump and hogtie
-it before one could count thirty. Then I would
-fall to grazing while he built a fire, heated his
-running-iron and put the company brand on
-the captive. There were days when we caught
-four or five in this manner. It was glorious
-sport.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then, of course, there was the fall
-roundup, when all our riders--twenty-two in
-number--swept the range in daily drives. We
-collected more than nineteen thousand head of
-cattle; some of the long-horned steers Chappo
-and I brought in had not set eyes on a man
-since they were suckling calves. It was good
-to chase these outlaws, they being stout and
-hearty on the rope, and it nerved me to see
-Chappo’s fearlessness and confidence. He
-would tie to one of the big brutes without hesitation,
-whatever the nature of the ground,
-trusting implicitly to me to throw it. If a
-steer had dragged me down, it would have
-meant maiming for Chappo and me, so I was
-ever on my guard. I always contrived to
-throw them, even though some weighed two
-hundred pounds heavier than I.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was Chappo’s top horse--that is to say, his
-best saddler. Consequently it was me he rode
-to town on the rare occasions he could get
-there. I took the best of care of him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On one occasion when he had spent an entire
-morning in town visiting various places of
-call with friends, Chappo bet fifty dollars I
-could throw an enormous bull they had in a
-feeding-pen. It was an intensely foolish
-wager; besides, he hadn’t the money, and was
-earning only forty dollars a month. The sight
-of this bull--a Hereford--appalled me for a
-moment, for he was a monstrous fellow,
-blocky and solid; but Chappo patted my neck
-and whispered to me, and when he let his noose
-fly, I darted off with taut muscles, unafraid,
-yet ready for the tremendous jar that would
-come with the tightened rope. What a giant
-he was! When he lunged, the girth nearly
-cut me in two, and for the fraction of a second
-I thought my feet would fly from under me
-and that Chappo would be ignominiously prostrated
-in the dust. Then, at the critical moment,
-we gave him slack, let him run to the
-end of it, wheeled like a striking snake, and
-with a cunning heave, flopped him ponderously
-on the ground. It broke his neck and they
-put Chappo in the calaboose. The boss
-got him out only after much ceremony and
-considerable loose talk and the payment of
-moneys.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Chappo dearly loved to go to town. He
-was always in excellent humor on these trips
-and would attempt feats that reflected more
-credit on his stoutness of heart than on his
-head. On a night, he tried to make me climb
-the steps of the hotel veranda and enter the
-bar. Had it been anyone but Chappo, I would
-have pitched him off without more ado, such
-was the childishness of this display. But because
-it was Chappo and I could feel from his
-legs that all was not right with him, I meekly
-ascended the steps and walked into the bar,
-taking heed where I placed my feet. A crowd
-of loafers cheered me and filled a large bowl,
-that I might drink, but Chappo would have
-none of this.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He sang much on the road back to camp. It
-was dark as a panther’s lair. Chappo would
-hum and drone a few lines, then relapse into
-abrupt silences. I kept every sense alert, for
-his safety depended on me. Once, when he
-sagged in the saddle, I stopped until he got
-settled again. After that he rode with firmer
-seat, but his good humor seemed to have vanished.
-We reached a point where a cow trail,
-a mere thread so faint that it was barely discernible,
-led off from the main trail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Here, you,” Chappo said, jerking me
-about, “who’s running this show? Hey?
-Doggone your fat haid. This is a cut-off.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The trail was new to me, but I took it obediently.
-It led in the general direction of
-camp, but became vaguer as we proceeded.
-Finally it merged into the brown of a hillside.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hell!” Chappo exclaimed. “Where’s that
-cussed trail gone to, Neutria? Well, let’s hit
-across country, boy. What’s twenty miles between
-two of us?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We struck over a hill at a trot. Suddenly
-my heart gave a leap and every hair on my
-body seemed to tingle. Just in time I sat back
-on my haunches. Chappo swore and struck
-me sharply with the spur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s the matter with you, you ol’ rascal?
-I swan.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Seen a skunk?” he cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I began to shiver, and that sobered him. It
-was too dark to make out anything and he
-lighted a match. A gulf yawned beneath
-us, where the hill dropped away to a jumble
-of rocks. Chappo sucked in his breath
-and let the match fall. Then he turned me
-around.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Neutria,” was all he said, but let his hand
-rest for a long minute on my withers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were following the Gap trail on a day in
-late autumn when, in rounding a bend, we almost
-collided with a rider.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hel-lo,” came in surprised accents. It was
-Sloan, on his sorrel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Howdy,” Chappo said. “Nice and cool,
-ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whose hoss is that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s my horse. Finest cowhorse in these
-here mountains.” Chappo would often boast
-thus. It was unwise, but it made me very
-proud nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Huh-huh. And who might you be?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Emp’ror of Rooshia.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sure. You might be, but you ain’t. You
-got papers for this here hoss?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, I ain’t got no papers for him. Don’t
-you see the Box C on him? That’s papers
-enough.” Chappo was careless and bold, but
-I knew he was anxious.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You got to have papers in Mexico. That’s
-my hoss, son.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes?” said Chappo. “Where’s your papers,
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I kin prove he’s mine,” Sloan said evenly.
-“I’ll be obliged for that hoss, pardner.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My master thought a moment. “What’s
-your name?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sloan.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes? I’ve heard of you, Sloan. The
-company knows you, too. There ain’t no use
-in gitting mad. Let’s talk business.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All right, son. But that’s my hoss and
-I’ll be obliged for him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sloan, I’m going to tell you about Neutria
-here. I caught him with a bunch of bronchos.
-He was a maverick, so I done put my brand
-on him. What’ll you take for him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I won’t take nothing.” I recognized that
-surly bass growl. He had been drinking.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll tell you what I’ll do. To save trouble,
-I’ll buy him off’n you. Me and him is friends.
-So I’ll give you seventy-five dollars gold for
-this here li’l’ horse. That’s a good price,
-Sloan. I’ll raise the money in a week.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, you won’t, young feller. You won’t
-give me seventy-five dollars, nor you won’t
-give me seventy-five thousand dollars. That’s
-my hoss. I won’t sell him. Him and me’s
-got a li’l’ account to square up, and--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then it’s up to you to prove he’s yours,”
-Chappo answered. I scarcely knew his voice,
-it had gone so hard and cold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t believe this hoss is mine?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not me. You rustle calves, Sloan, and--”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I love a thief,” Sloan said, “but I hate a
-liar.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What happened then was beyond my powers
-of perception. I felt Chappo reach to his hip.
-There was a flash that singed my face, and
-Sloan sat his sorrel with a smoking six-shooter
-in his hand. My master tumbled sideways,
-twisting the saddle as he fell, and struck the
-ground on his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t shoot, Sloan,” he begged, “I ain’t
-got my gun. You’ve done for me anyway.
-Don’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But Sloan slued his horse that he might obtain
-a clear shot, and pulled twice on him with
-deliberate aim.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now,” he cried clutching my reins, “now
-I’ll settle with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I reared straight up and plunged forward at
-him. The headstall snapped and the bit
-dropped from my mouth. With the smack of
-my shod hoofs on his flank, the sorrel began to
-pitch, and Sloan dropped his gun.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With that I ran--ran as I had never run before
-in my life. When utterly worn out, I
-slowed to a walk and endeavored to rid myself
-of the saddle, which galled me badly. For a
-long time it resisted every effort, but I did not
-despair. Chappo’s fall had turned it underneath
-my belly and there it was in reach of my
-hind feet. Before dawn I had kicked and torn
-the thing from my sides, and was free and unencumbered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Why tell of my frantic wanderings during
-the next two days? The spot where my master
-had fallen drew me irresistibly. I could not
-leave; but I feared Sloan more than ever and
-spent the hours in cautious circlings of the vicinity
-of the Gap. At last I could bear it no
-longer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The moon was shining as I lightly trod the
-Gap trail. Going warily as a coyote, I was
-brought to a standstill by a strong taint. I
-sniffed and was fearfully expectant, but still
-advanced. Something was swinging from
-the lowest limb of an elm. A rope creaked
-mournfully to the swinging. I snorted and
-made a circuit of the thing, approaching gingerly.
-A gust of wind turned the object, so
-that the moon lighted its every line.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was Sloan.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A hundred yards beyond, I came on a small
-pile of rocks. They had laid Chappo where
-he fell. Above the rocks was a rude cross,
-fashioned of mesquite boughs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am a free rover now. Sometimes I run
-with the wild horses. Again I go off for solitary
-pilgrimages into the mountain fastnesses.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Often I steal back at night to the Gap trail.
-And there, beside the pile of stones and the
-cross, I whinny--whinny again. But Chappo
-never answers.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:2em;'>THE END</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk103'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='margin-top:2em;font-size:1.1em;font-weight:bold;'>Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Archaic spellings
-and hyphenation have been retained. Inconsistencies in hyphenation
-have been retained. Obvious typesetting errors have been corrected
-without note.</p>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>[End of <span class='it'>The Untamed</span>, by George Pattullo]</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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