CAMP
CLOUDCREST,
October
6, 1914.
DEAR MRS. CONEY,
It seems so odd to be writing you
and getting no answers. Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
just now asked me what I have against you that I write
you so much. I haven’t one thing. I
told her I owed you more love than I could ever pay
in a lifetime, and she said writing such long
letters is a mighty poor way to show it. I have
been neglecting you shamefully, I think. One
of the main reasons I came on this hunt was to take
the trip for you, and to tell you things that
you would most enjoy. So I will spend this snowy
day in writing to you.
On the night of September 30, there
was the most awful thunderstorm I ever witnessed, flash
after flash of the most blinding lightning, followed
by deafening peals of thunder; and as it echoed from
mountain to mountain the uproar was terrifying.
I have always loved a storm; the beat of hail and
rain, and the roar of wind always appeal to me; but
there was neither wind nor rain, just flash
and roar. Before the echo died away among the
hills another booming report would seem to shiver
the atmosphere and set all our tinware jangling.
We are camped so near the great pines that I will
confess I was powerfully afraid. Had the lightning
struck one of the big pines there would not have been
one of us left. I could hear Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
murmuring her prayers when there was a lull.
We had gone to bed, but I couldn’t remain there;
so I sat on the wagon-seat with Jerrine beside me.
Something struck the guy ropes of the tent, and I was
so frightened I was too weak to cry out. I thought
the big tree must have fallen. In the lulls of
the storm I could hear the men’s voices, high
and excited. They, too, were up. It seemed
to me that the storm lasted for hours; but at last
it moved off up the valley, the flashes grew to be
a mere glimmer, and the thunder mere rumbling.
The pines began to moan, and soon a little breeze
whistled by. So we lay down again. Next
morning the horses could not be found; the storm had
frightened them, and they had tried to go home.
The men had to find them, and as it took most of the
day, we had to put off our hunt.
We were up and about next morning
in the first faint gray light. While the men
fed grain to the horses and saddled them, we prepared
a hasty breakfast. We were off before it was
more than light enough for us to see the trail.
Dawn in the mountains how
I wish I could describe it to you! If I could
only make you feel the keen, bracing air, the exhilarating
climb; if I could only paint its beauties, what a picture
you should have! Here the colors are very different
from those of the desert. I suppose the forest
makes it so. The shadows are mellow, like the
colors in an old picture greenish amber
light and a blue-gray sky. Far ahead of us we
could see the red rim rock of a mountain above timber
line. The first rays of the sun turned the jagged
peaks into golden points of a crown. In Oklahoma,
at that hour of the day, the woods would be alive
with song-birds, even at this season; but here there
are no song-birds, and only the snapping of twigs,
as our horses climbed the frosty trail, broke the
silence. We had been cautioned not to talk, but
neither Mrs. O’Shaughnessy nor I wanted to.
Afterwards, when we compared notes, we found that
we both had the same thought: we both felt ashamed
to be out to deal death to one of the Maker’s
beautiful creatures, and we were planning how we might
avoid it.
The sun was well up when we reached
the little park where we picketed our horses.
Then came a long, hard climb. It is hard climbing
at the best, and when there is a big gun to carry,
it is very hard. Then too, we had to keep
up with the men, and we didn’t find that easy
to do. At last we reached the top and sat down
on some boulders to rest a few minutes before we started
down to the hunting ground, which lay in a cuplike
valley far below us.
We could hear the roar of the Gros
Ventre as it tumbled grumblingly over its rocky bed.
To our right rose mile after mile of red cliffs.
As the last of the quaking asp leaves have fallen,
there were no golden groves. In their places
stood silvery patches against the red background of
the cliffs. High overhead a triangle of wild geese
harrowed the blue sky.
I was plumb out of breath, but men
who are most gallant elsewhere are absolutely heartless
on a hunt. I was scarcely through panting before
we began to descend. We received instructions
as to how we should move so as to keep out of range
of each other’s guns; then Mr. Haynes and myself
started one way, and Mr. Struble and Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
the other. We were to meet where the valley terminated
in a broad pass. We felt sure we could get a
chance at what elk there might be in the valley.
We were following fresh tracks, and a little of the
hunter’s enthusiasm seized me.
We had not followed them far when
three cows and a “spike” came running
out of the pines a little ahead of us. Instantly
Mr. Haynes’s gun flew to his shoulder and a
deafening report jarred our ears. He ran forward,
but I stood still, fascinated by what I saw. Our
side of the valley was bounded by a rim of rock.
Over the rim was a sheer wall of rock for two hundred
feet, to where the Gros Ventre was angrily roaring
below; on the other side of the stream rose the red
cliffs with their jagged crags. At the report
of the gun two huge blocks of stone almost as large
as a house detached themselves and fell. At the
same instant one of the quaking asp groves began to
move slowly. I couldn’t believe my eyes.
I shut them a moment, but when I looked the grove
was moving faster. It slid swiftly, and I could
plainly hear the rattle of stones falling against
stones, until with a muffled roar the whole hillside
fell into the stream.
Mr. Haynes came running back.
“What is the matter? Are you hurt?
Why didn’t you shoot?” he asked.
I waved my hand weakly toward where
the great mound of tangled trees and earth blocked
the water. “Why,” he said, “that
is only a landslide, not an earthquake. You are
as white as a ghost. Come on up here and see
my fine elk.”
I sat on a log watching him dress
his elk. We have found it best not to remove
the skin, but the elk have to be quartered so as to
load them on to a horse. Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
and Mr. Struble came out of the woods just then.
They had seen a big bunch of elk headed by a splendid
bull, but got no shot, and the elk went out of the
pass. They had heard our shot, and came across
to see what luck.
“What iver is the matter with
ye?” asked Mrs. O’Shaughnessy. Mr.
Haynes told her. They had heard the noise, but
had thought it thunder. Mr. Haynes told me that
if I would “chirk up” he would give me
his elk teeth. Though I don’t admire them,
they are considered valuable; however, his elk was
a cow, and they don’t have as nice teeth as do
bulls.
We had lunch, and the men covered
the elk with pine boughs to keep the camp robbers
from pecking it full of holes. Next day the men
would come with the horses and pack it in to camp.
We all felt refreshed; so we started on the trail
of those that got away.
For a while walking was easy and we
made pretty good time; then we had a rocky hill to
get over. We had to use care when we got into
the timber; there were marshy places which tried us
sorely, and windfall so thick that we could hardly
get through. We were obliged to pick our way
carefully to avoid noise, and we were all together,
not having come to a place where it seemed better
to separate. We had about resolved to go to our
horses when we heard a volley of shots.
“That is somebody bunch-shooting,”
said Mr. Struble. “They are in Brewster
Lake Park, by the sound. That means that the elk
will pass here in a short time and we may get a shot.
The elk will be here long before the men, since the
men have no horses; so let’s hurry and get placed
along the only place they can get out. We’ll
get our limit.”
We hastily secreted ourselves along
the narrow gorge through which the elk must pass.
We were all on one side, and Mr. Haynes said to me,
“Rest your gun on that rock and aim at the first
rib back of the shoulder. If you shoot haphazard
you may cripple an elk and let it get away to die
in misery. So make sure when you fire.”
It didn’t seem a minute before
we heard the beat of their hoofs and a queer panting
noise that I can’t describe. First came
a beautiful thing with his head held high; his great
antlers seemed to lie half his length on his back;
his eyes were startled, and his shining black mane
seemed to bristle. I heard the report of guns,
and he tumbled in a confused heap. He tried to
rise, but others coming leaped over him and knocked
him down. Some more shots, and those behind turned
and went back the way they had come.
Mr. Haynes shouted to me, “Shoot,
shoot; why don’t you shoot!”
So I fired my Krag, but next I found
myself picking myself up and wondering who had struck
me and for what. I was so dizzy I could scarcely
move, but I got down to where the others were excitedly
admiring the two dead elk that they said were the victims
of Mrs. O’Shaughnessy’s gun. She
was as excited and delighted as if she had never declared
she would not kill anything. “Sure, it’s
many a meal they’ll make for little hungry mouths,”
she said. She was rubbing her shoulder ruefully.
“I don’t want to fire any more big guns.
I thought old Goliar had hit me a biff with a blackthorn
shilaley,” she remarked.
Mr. Haynes turned to me and said,
“You are a dandy hunter! you didn’t shoot
at all until after the elk were gone, and the way you
held your gun it is a wonder it didn’t knock
your head off, instead of just smashing your jaw.”
The men worked as fast as they could
at the elk, and we helped as much as we could, but
it was dark before we reached camp. Supper was
ready, but I went to bed at once. They all thought
it was because I was so disappointed, but it was because
I was so stiff and sore I could hardly move, and so
tired I couldn’t sleep. Next morning my
jaw and neck were so swollen that I hated any one
to see me, and my head ached for two days. It
has been snowing for a long time, but Clyde says he
will take me hunting when it stops. I don’t
want to go but reckon I will have to, because I don’t
want to come so far and buy a license to kill an elk
and go back empty-handed, and partly to get a rest
from Mr. Murry’s everlasting accordion.
Mr. Murry is an old-time acquaintance
of Mrs. O’Shaughnessy’s. He has a
ranch down on the river somewhere. Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
has not seen him for years, didn’t
know he lived up here. He had seen the game-warden
from whom she had procured her license, and so hunted
up our camp. He is an odd-looking individual,
with sad eyes and a drooping mouth which gives his
face a most hopeless, reproachful expression.
His nose, however, seems to upset the original plan,
for it is long and thin and bent slightly to one side.
His neck is long and his Adam’s apple seems
uncertain as to where it belongs. At supper Jerrine
watched it as if fascinated until I sent her from the
table and went out to speak to her about gazing.
“Why, mamma,” she said,
“I had to look; he has swallowed something that
won’t go either up or down, and I’m ’fraid
he’ll choke.”
Although I can’t brag about
Mr. Murry’s appearance, I can about his taste,
for he admires Mrs. O’Shaughnessy. It seems
that in years gone by he has made attempts to marry
her.
As he got up from supper the first
night he was with us, he said, “Mary Ellen,
I have a real treat and surprise for you. Just
wait a few minutes, an’ I’ll bet you’ll
be happy.”
We took our accustomed places around
the fire, while Mr. Murry hobbled his cayuse and took
an odd-looking bundle from his saddle. He seated
himself and took from the bundle an accordion!
He set it upon his knee and began pulling and pushing
on it. He did what Mr. Struble said was doling
a doleful tune. Every one took it good-naturedly,
but he kept doling the doleful until little by little
the circle thinned.
Our tent is as comfortable as can
be. Now that it is snowing, we sit around the
stoves, and we should have fine times if Professor
Glenholdt could have a chance to talk; but we have
to listen to “Run, Nigger, Run” and “The
Old Gray Hoss Come A-tearin’ Out The Wilderness.”
I’ll sing them to you when I come to Denver.
With
much love to you,
ELINORE
RUPERT STEWART.