IN
CAMP ON THE DESERT,
October
19.
MY DEAR, DEAR FRIEND,
It is with a chastened, humble heart
that I begin this letter; I have stood face to face
with tragedy and romance, and to me one is as touching
as the other, but you will know better when I tell
you what I mean. We all bustled about
to get started from Newfork. Now that we had
started, all were homesick. Just ahead of us was
a drove of two thousand steers being driven to the
railroad to be shipped. I advise you to keep
ahead of such drives when you take such a trip, because
the trampling of so many feet makes a road almost impassable.
What had been snow in the mountains had been rain
on the desert, and we found the going decidedly bad.
A rise of a hill would give us, now and then, a glimpse
of a slow-moving, dark-colored mass of heaving forms,
and the desert breezes brought to our ears the mournful
lowing of the poor creatures. Sometimes, too,
we could hear a snatch of the cowboys’ songs.
It was all very beautiful and I would have enjoyed
it hugely except that my desire to be home far outran
the wagon and I felt like a prisoner with clogs.
We nooned at the cabin of Timothy
Hobbs, but no one was at home; he at last had gone
“back East” for Jennie. About mid-afternoon
the boss of the cow outfit came up on a splendid horse.
He was a pleasant fellow and he made a handsome picture,
with his big hat, his great chaps and his jangling
spurs, as he rode along beside our wagons, talking.
He told us that a crazy duffer had
gone about over the desert for years digging wells,
but at last he struck water. A few miles ahead
was a well flowing like an artesian well. There
would be plenty of water for every one, even the cattle.
Next morning we could start ahead of the herds and
so the roads would be a little better.
It was quite early when we made camp
in the same long draw where we saw Olaf. There
was a great change. Where had been dry, burning
sand was now a clear little stream that formed shallow
pools where the sand had blown away, so that harder
soil could form a bottom less greedy than the sand.
Off to our left the uneasy herd was being held in a
wide, flat valley. They were grazing on the dry,
sparse herbage of the desert. Quite near the
well the mess-wagon had stopped and the cook was already
preparing supper. Beyond, a few yards away, a
freighter’s long outfit was stopped in the road.
Did you ever see the kind of freight
outfit that is used to bring the great loads across
the desert? Then I’ll tell you about the
one we camped near. Freight wagons are not made
precisely like others; they are very much larger and
stronger. Several of these are coupled together;
then as many teams as is necessary are hitched on making
a long, unbroken string of wagons. The horses
are arranged in the same manner as the wagons.
Great chains are used to pull the wagons, and when
a camp is made the whole affair is stopped in the middle
of the road and the harness is dropped right where
the horse that bore it stood. Many freighters
have what they call a coaster hitched to the last
wagon. The coaster is almost like other wagons,
but it is a home on wheels; it is built and furnished
as sheep wagons are. This freighter had one,
and as we drove past I was surprised to see the form
of a woman and a small boy. We camped quite near
them.
For an hour we were very busy preparing
supper and arranging for the night. As we sat
at supper I thought I had never known so quiet and
peaceful an hour. The sun hung like a great, red
ball in the hazy west. Purple shadows were already
gathering. A gentle wind rippled past across
the dun sands and through the gray-green sage.
The chain parts of the hobbles and
halters made a clinking sound as the horses fed about.
Presently we heard a rumbling just like distant thunder.
The cowboys sprang into their saddles; we heard a shot,
and then we knew the terrible truth, the
steers had stampeded. For me, the next few minutes
were an eternity of frightful confusion. Mrs.
O’Shaughnessy and I found ourselves with the
children upon our largest wagon; that was absolutely
all the protection to be had. It would have gone
down like a house of cards if that heaving sea of destruction
had turned our way. I was scared witless.
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy knelt among the children
praying with white lips. I stood up watching the
terrible scene. The men hastily set the horses
free. There was no time to mount them and ride
to safety with so many little children, and as there
was nothing to tie them to but the wagons; we had
to let them go so as to have the wagons left for shelter.
This is why cowboys are such well-loved figures
of romance and in mentioning them romance is fact.
“Greater love hath no
man than this: that he lay down his life for
his brother.” They knew nothing about us
only that we were defenseless. They rode boldly
on their stanch little horses flanking the frenzied
steers, shooting a leader here and there as they got
a chance. If an animal stumbled it went down
to its death, for hundreds of pounding hoofs would
trample it to pulp. So it would have been with
the boys if their horses had stepped into a badger
hole or anything of the kind had happened. So
the tide was turned, or the steers kept of themselves,
I don’t know which, on up the valley instead
of coming up our draw. The danger was past.
Presently the cowboys came straggling
back. Mrs. O’Shaughnessy ran to meet them.
So when two on one horse came with a third riding close
beside, helping to hold an injured man on, we knew
some one was hurt. Mrs. O’Shaughnessy was,
as usual, ready and able to help.
But the freighter’s daughter
was as quick and had a mattress ready beside the coaster
by the time the cowboys came up with the wounded man.
Gently the men helped their comrade to the mattress
and gently Mrs. O’Shaughnessy and the girl began
their work. I quieted the children and put them
to bed. The men were busy rounding up the horses.
The cowboys kept talking together in low tones and
coming and going in twos and threes. They acted
so queerly that I wondered if some one else was not
hurt. I asked the boss if any more of his men
were hurt. He said no, none of his men
were. I knew none of our men or the freighter
were harmed, so I dismissed fear and went to Mrs.
O’Shaughnessy.
“Poor boy,” she said,
“he has a broken thigh and he’s hurt inside.
His belly is knocked into a cocked-hat. We will
pull him through. A man has already gone back
to Newfork to get an automobile. They will take
him to Rock Springs to the hospital in the morning.”
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy and the girl
were doing all that could be done; they sent me back
to care for the children. To keep warm I crawled
under the blankets, but not to sleep. It didn’t
seem to me that I could ever sleep again.
I could hear the men talking in subdued tones.
The boss was dispatching men to different places.
Presently I saw some men take a lantern and move off
toward the valley. I could see the light twinkling
in and out among the sage-brush. They stopped.
I could see forms pass before the light. I wondered
what could be the matter. The horses were all
safe; even Boy, Mr. Haynes’s dog, was safe,
shivering and whining on his master’s blankets.
I could plainly hear the hiccoughs of the wounded
man: the click-cluck, click-cluck, kept on with
maddening persistence, but at last his nurses forced
enough hot water down him to cause vomiting. The
blood-clots came and the poor fellow fell asleep.
A lantern was hung upon the wagon and the two women
went into the coaster to make some coffee.
It was three o’clock in the
morning when the men of our outfit came back.
They put on their heavy coats and were seeing to their
horses. I asked Clyde what was the matter.
“Hush,” he said; “lie still.
It is Olaf.”
“But I want to help,” I said.
“You can’t help.
It’s all over,” he replied as
he started again to where the lantern was gleaming
like a star fallen among the sage.
I tucked the children in a little
more snugly, then went over to the coaster.
“Won’t you come to bed
and rest?” I asked Mrs. O’Shaughnessy.
“No, I’ll not. Are me children covered
and warm?”
“Yes,” I answered.
“What are them fellys pow-wowing about down
in the sage?”
“Olaf is dead,” I said.
“Who says God is not merciful?
Now all the poor felly’s troubles are done with.
’Twas him that caused the stampede, mayhap.
God send him peace. I am glad. He will never
be hungry nor cold any more.”
“Yes,” said the girl;
speaking slowly. “I am glad, too. He
almost lived in this draw. We saw him every trip
and he did suffer. Dad left a little for
him to eat and whatever he could to wear every trip.
The sheep-herders helped him, too. But he suffered.
All the home he had was an old, thrown-away sheep
wagon down beyond the last ridge toward the valley.
I’ve seen him every two weeks for ten years.
It’s a wonder he has not been killed before.”
“I wonder,” said Mrs.
O’Shaughnessy, “if he has any family.
Where will they bury him?”
“He has no people. If they
will listen to Dad, they will lay him here on the
desert. He would want it so.”
After breakfast Mrs. O’Shaughnessy
lay down for a little rest. When the wounded
man awoke the girl gave him a little coffee.
“You’re awful good to
me,” he said. “I’d like to have
you around all the time.”
The girl smiled gravely. “Ain’t
you got nobody to take care of you?”
“No. What is your name?”
“Amy Winters. Now you must hush. Talkin’
might make you worse.”
“I’m not so tur’ble bad off.
Where do you live?”
“In the coaster, somewhere on
the road between Pinedale and Rock Springs. Dad
is a freighter.”
“Huh! Do you like to live that way?”
“No; I want a house and a garden
awful bad, but Dad can’t do nothin’ but
freight and we’ve got Jessie to raise. We
ain’t got no ma.”
“Do women have to change their names
when they marry?”
“I don’t know. Reckon they do, though.
Why?”
“’Cause my name is Tod
Winters. I know where there is a dandy little
place up on the Gros Ventre where a cabin would look
mighty good to me if there was some one to keep it
for me
“Oh, say,” she interrupted,
“that is a awful pretty handkerchief you’ve
got around your neck.”
Just then the automobile came up frightening
our horses. I heard no more, but the “awful
pretty handkerchief” was missing when the hero
left for the hospital. They used some lumber from
a load the freighter had and walled up a grave for
Olaf. They had no tools but axes and a shovel
we had along. By noon Olaf was buried. Glenholdt
set a slab of sandstone at the head. With his
knife he had dug out these words “Olaf.
The friend of horses.”
We camped last night at Ten Trees.
To-night we are at Eden Valley. The mystery of
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy’s sudden change about
the license is explained. She unloaded an elk
at the Sanders cabin. “’Twas two I aimed
to bring you, but me own family has increased by twins
whilst I’ve been gone, so one ilk will have
to do you.”
So now, dear friend, I am a little
nearer you. In one more week I shall be home.
Sincerely,
thankfully yours,
E.
R. S.