Incamp on the desert,
August
24, 1914.
Dear Mrs. Coney,
At last we are off. I am powerfully
glad. I shall have to enjoy this trip for us
both. You see how greedy I am for new experiences!
I have never been on a prolonged hunt before, so I
am looking forward to a heap of fun. I hardly
know what to do about writing, but shall try to write
every two days. I want you to have as much of
this trip as I can put on paper, so we will begin
at the start.
To begin with we were all to meet
at Green River, to start the twentieth; but a professor
coming from somewhere in the East delayed us a day,
and also some of the party changed their plans; that
reduced our number but not our enthusiasm.
A few days before we left the ranch
I telephoned Mrs. Louderer and tried to persuade her
to go along, but she replied, “For why should
I go? Vat? Iss it to freeze? I can
sleep out on some rocks here and with a stick I can
beat the sage-bush, which will give me the smell you
will smell of the outside. And for the game I
can have a beef kill which iss better to eat as elk.”
I love Mrs. Louderer dearly, but she
is absolutely devoid of imagination, and her matter-of-factness
is mighty trying sometimes. However, she sent
me a bottle of goose-grease to ward off colds from
the “kinder.”
I tried Mrs. O’Shaughnessy,
but she was plumb aggravating and non-committal, and
it seemed when we got to Green River that I would
be the only woman in the party. Besides, all the
others were strangers to me except young Mr. Haynes,
who was organizing the hunt. Really the prospect
didn’t seem so joyous.
The afternoon before we were to start
I went with Mr. Stewart and Mr. Haynes to meet the
train. We were expecting the professor. But
the only passenger who got off was a slight, gray-eyed
girl. She looked about her uncertainly for a
moment and then went into the depot while we returned
to the hotel. Just as I started up the steps my
eyes were gladdened by the sight of Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
in her buckboard trotting merrily up the street.
She waved her hand to us and drove up. Clyde
took her team to the livery barn and she came up to
my room with me.
“It’s going with you I
am,” she began. “Ye’ll need
somebody to keep yez straight and to sew up the holes
ye’ll be shooting into each other.”
After she had “tidied up a bit”
we went down to supper. We were all seated at
one table, and there was yet an empty place; but soon
the girl we had seen get off the train came and seated
herself in it.
“Can any of you tell me how
to get to Kendall, Wyoming?” she asked.
I didn’t know nor did Clyde,
but Mrs. O’Shaughnessy knew, so she answered.
“Kendall is in the forest reserve up north.
It is two hundred miles from here and half of the
distance is across desert, but they have an automobile
route as far as Pinedale; you could get that far on
the auto stage. After that I suppose you could
get some one to take you on.”
“Thank you,” said the
girl. “My name is Elizabeth Hull. I
am alone in the world, and I am not expected at Kendall,
so I am obliged to ask and to take care of myself.”
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy at once mentioned
her own name and introduced the rest of us. After
supper Miss Hull and Mrs. O’Shaughnessy had a
long talk. I was not much surprised when Mrs.
O’Shaughnessy came in to tell me that she was
going to take the girl along. “Because,”
she said, “Kendall is on our way and it’s
glad I am to help a lone girl. Did you notice
the freckles of her? Sure her forbears hailed
from Killarney.”
So early next morning we were astir.
We had outfitted in Green River, so the wagons were
already loaded. I had rather dreaded the professor.
I had pictured to myself a very dignified, bespectacled
person, and I mentally stood in awe of his great learning.
Imagine my surprise when a boyish, laughing young
man introduced himself as Professor Glenholdt.
He was so jolly, so unaffected, and so altogether likable,
that my fear vanished and I enjoyed the prospect of
his company. Mr. Haynes and his friend Mr. Struble
on their wagon led the way, then we followed, and
after us came Mrs. O’Shaughnessy, and Miss Hull
brought up the rear, with the professor riding horseback
beside first one wagon and then another.
So we set out. There was a great
jangling and banging, for our tin camp-stoves kept
the noise going. Neither the children nor I can
ride under cover on a wagon, we get so sick; so there
we were, perched high up on great rolls of bedding
and a tent. I reckon we looked funny to the “onlookers
looking on” as we clattered down the street;
but we were off and that meant a heap.
All the morning our way lay up the
beautiful river, past the great red cliffs and through
tiny green parks, but just before noon the road wound
itself up on to the mesa, which is really the beginning
of the desert. We crowded into the shadow of
the wagons to eat our midday meal; but we could not
stop long, because it was twenty-eight miles to where
we could get water for the horses when we should camp
that night. So we wasted no time.
Shortly after noon we could see white
clouds of alkali dust ahead. By and by we came
up with the dust-raisers. The children and I had
got into the buckboard with Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
and Miss Hull, so as to ride easier and be able to
gossip, and we had driven ahead of the wagons, so
as to avoid the stinging dust.
The sun was just scorching when we
overtook the funniest layout I have seen since Cora
Belle drove up to our door the first time.
In a wobbly old buckboard sat a young couple completely
engrossed by each other. That he was a Westerner
we knew by his cowboy hat and boots; that she was
an Easterner, by her not knowing how to dress for the
ride across the desert. She wore a foolish little
chiffon hat which the alkali dust had ruined, and
all the rest of her clothes matched. But over
them the enterprising young man had raised one of those
big old sunshades that had lettering on them.
It kept wobbling about in the socket he had improvised;
one minute we could see “Tea”; then a
rut in the road would swing “Coffee” around.
Their sunshade kept revolving about that way, and
sometimes their heads revolved a little bit, too.
We could hear a word occasionally and knew they were
having a great deal of fun at our expense; but we
were amused ourselves, so we didn’t care.
They would drive along slowly until we almost reached
them; then they would whip up and raise such a dust
that we were almost choked.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy determined
to drive ahead; so she trotted up alongside, but she
could not get ahead. The young people were giggling.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy doesn’t like to be the
joke all the time. Suddenly she leaned over toward
them and said: “Will ye tell me something?”
Oh, yes, they would. “Then,” she said,
“which of you are Tea and which Coffee?”
Their answer was to drive up faster
and stir up a powerful lot of dust. They kept
pretty well ahead after that, but at sundown we came
up with them at the well where we were to camp.
This well had been sunk by the county for the convenience
of travelers, and we were mighty thankful to find
it. It came out that our young couple were bride
and groom. They had never seen each other until
the night before, having met through a matrimonial
paper. They had met in Green River and were married
that morning, and the young husband was taking her
away up to Pinedale to his ranch.
They must have been ideally happy,
for they had forgotten their mess-box, and had only
a light lunch. They had only their lap-robe for
bedding. They were in a predicament; but the girl’s
chief concern was lest “Honey-bug” should
let the wolves get her. Though it is scorching
hot on the desert by day, the nights are keenly cool,
and I was wondering how they would manage with only
their lap-robe, when Mrs. O’Shaughnessy, who
cannot hold malice, made a round of the camp, getting
a blanket here and a coat there, until she had enough
to make them comfortable. Then she invited them
to take their meals with us until they could get to
where they could help themselves.
I think we all enjoyed camp that night,
for we were all tired. We were in a shallow little
canyon, not a tree, not even a bush except
sage-brush. Luckily, there was plenty of that,
so we had roaring fires. We sat around the fire
talking as the blue shadows faded into gray dusk and
the big stars came out. The newly-weds were, as
the bride put it, “so full of happiness they
had nothing to put it in.” Certainly their
spirits overflowed. They were eager to talk of
themselves and we didn’t mind listening.
They are Mr. and Mrs. Tom Burney.
She is the oldest of a large family of children and
has had to “work out ever since she was big enough
to get a job.” The people she had worked
for rather frowned upon any matrimonial ventures,
and as no provision was made for “help”
entertaining company, she had never had a “beau.”
One day she got hold of a matrimonial paper and saw
Mr. Burney’s ad. She answered and they
corresponded for several months. We were just
in time to “catch it,” as Mr. Haynes who
is a confirmed bachelor disgustedly remarked.
Personally, I am glad; I like them much better than
I thought I should when they were raising so much
dust so unnecessarily.
I must close this letter, as I see
the men are about ready to start. The children
are standing the trip well, except that Robert is
a little sun-blistered. Did I tell you we left
Junior with his grandmother? Even though I have
the other three, my heart is hungry for my “big
boy,” who is only a baby, too. He is such
a precious little man. I wish you could see him!
With a heart very full of love for you,
E. R.
S.