In the old days, the happy days, when
Wyoming was a Territory with a future instead of a
State with a past, and the unfenced cattle grazed
upon her ranges by prosperous thousands, young Lin
McLean awaked early one morning in cow camp, and lay
staring out of his blankets upon the world. He
would be twenty-two this week. He was the youngest
cow-puncher in camp. But because he could break
wild horses, he was earning more dollars a month than
any man there, except one. The cook was a more
indispensable person. None save the cook was up,
so far, this morning. Lin’s brother punchers
slept about him on the ground, some motionless, some
shifting their prone heads to burrow deeper from the
increasing day. The busy work of spring was over,
that of the fall, or beef round-up, not yet come.
It was mid-July, a lull for these hard-riding bachelors
of the saddle, and many unspent dollars stood to Mr.
McLean’s credit on the ranch books.
“What’s the matter with
some variety?” muttered the boy in his blankets.
The long range of the mountains lifted
clear in the air. They slanted from the purple
folds and furrows of the pines that richly cloaked
them, upward into rock and grassy bareness until they
broke remotely into bright peaks, and filmed into
the distant lavender of the north and the south.
On their western side the streams ran into Snake or
into Green River, and so at length met the Pacific.
On this side, Wind River flowed forth from them, descending
out of the Lake of the Painted Meadows. A mere
trout-brook it was up there at the top of the divide,
with easy riffles and stepping-stones in many places;
but down here, outside the mountains, it was become
a streaming avenue, a broadening course, impetuous
between its two tall green walls of cottonwood-trees.
And so it wound away like a vast green ribbon across
the lilac-gray sage-brush and the yellow, vanishing
plains.
“Variety, you bet!” young Lin repeated,
aloud.
He unrolled himself from his bed,
and brought from the garments that made his pillow
a few toilet articles. He got on his long boy
legs and limped blithely to the margin. In the
mornings his slight lameness was always more visible.
The camp was at Bull Lake Crossing, where the fork
from Bull Lake joins Wind River. Here Lin found
some convenient shingle-stones, with dark, deepish
water against them, where he plunged his face and
energetically washed, and came up with the short curly
hair shining upon his round head. After enough
looks at himself in the dark water, and having knotted
a clean, jaunty handkerchief at his throat, he returned
with his slight limp to camp, where they were just
sitting at breakfast to the rear of the cook-shelf
of the wagon.
“Bugged up to kill!” exclaimed
one, perceiving Lin’s careful dress.
“He sure has not shaved again?”
another inquired, with concern.
“I ain’t got my opera-glasses on,”
answered a third.
“He has spared that pansy-blossom mustache,”
said a fourth.
“My spring crop,” remarked
young Lin, rounding on this last one, “has juicier
prospects than that rat-eaten catastrophe of last year’s
hay which wanders out of your face.”
“Why, you’ll soon be talking
yourself into a regular man,” said the other.
But the camp laugh remained on the
side of young Lin till breakfast was ended, when the
ranch foreman rode into camp.
Him Lin McLean at once addressed.
“I was wantin’ to speak to you,”
said he.
The experienced foreman noticed the
boy’s holiday appearance. “I understand
you’re tired of work,” he remarked.
“Who told you?” asked the bewildered Lin.
The foreman touched the boy’s
pretty handkerchief. “Well, I have a way
of taking things in at a glance,” said he.
“That’s why I’m foreman, I expect.
So you’ve had enough work?”
“My system’s full of it,”
replied Lin, grinning. As the foreman stood thinking,
he added, “And I’d like my time.”
Time, in the cattle idiom, meant back-pay up to date.
“It’s good we’re not busy,”
said the foreman.
“Meanin’ I’d quit all the same?”
inquired Lin, rapidly, flushing.
“No not meaning any
offence. Catch up your horse. I want to make
the post before it gets hot.”
The foreman had come down the river
from the ranch at Meadow Creek, and the post, his
goal, was Fort Washakie. All this part of the
country formed the Shoshone Indian Reservation, where,
by permission, pastured the herds whose owner would
pay Lin his time at Washakie. So the young cow-puncher
flung on his saddle and mounted.
“So-long!” he remarked
to the camp, by way of farewell. He might never
be going to see any of them again; but the cow-punchers
were not demonstrative by habit.
“Going to stop long at Washakie?” asked
one.
“Alma is not waiter-girl at the hotel now,”
another mentioned.
“If there’s a new girl,”
said a third, “kiss her one for me, and tell
her I’m handsomer than you.”
“I ain’t a deceiver of women,” said
Lin.
“That’s why you’ll tell her,”
replied his friend.
“Say, Lin, why are you quittin’
us so sudden, anyway?” asked the cook, grieved
to lose him.
“I’m after some variety,” said the
boy.
“If you pick up more than you
can use, just can a little of it for me!” shouted
the cook at the departing McLean.
This was the last of camp by Bull
Lake Crossing, and in the foreman’s company
young Lin now took the road for his accumulated dollars.
“So you’re leaving your
bedding and stuff with the outfit?” said the
foreman.
“Brought my tooth-brush,”
said Lin, showing it in the breast-pocket of his flannel
shirt.
“Going to Denver?”
“Why, maybe.”
“Take in San Francisco?”
“Sounds slick.”
“Made any plans?”
“Gosh, no!”
“Don’t want anything on your brain?”
“Nothin’ except my hat,
I guess,” said Lin, and broke into cheerful
song:
“’Twas a nasty baby
anyhow,
And it only died to spite us;
’Twas afflicted with the cerebrow
Spinal meningitis!’”
They wound up out of the magic valley
of Wind River, through the bastioned gullies and the
gnome-like mystery of dry water-courses, upward and
up to the level of the huge sage-brush plain above.
Behind lay the deep valley they had climbed from,
mighty, expanding, its trees like bushes, its cattle
like pebbles, its opposite side towering also to the
edge of this upper plain. There it lay, another
world. One step farther away from its rim, and
the two edges of the plain had flowed together over
it like a closing sea, covering without a sign or ripple
the great country which lay sunk beneath.
“A man might think he’d
dreamed he’d saw that place,” said Lin
to the foreman, and wheeled his horse to the edge
again. “She’s sure there, though,”
he added, gazing down. For a moment his boy face
grew thoughtful. “Shucks!” said he
then, abruptly, “where’s any joy in money
that’s comin’ till it arrives? I have
most forgot the feel o’ spot-cash.”
He turned his horse away from the
far-winding vision of the river, and took a sharp
jog after the foreman, who had not been waiting for
him. Thus they crossed the eighteen miles of
high plain, and came down to Fort Washakie, in the
valley of Little Wind, before the day was hot.
His roll of wages once jammed in his
pocket like an old handkerchief, young Lin precipitated
himself out of the post-trader’s store and away
on his horse up the stream among the Shoshone tepees
to an unexpected entertainment a wolf-dance.
He had meant to go and see what the new waiter-girl
at the hotel looked like, but put this off promptly
to attend the dance. This hospitality the Shoshone
Indians were extending to some visiting Ute friends,
and the neighborhood was assembled to watch the ring
of painted naked savages.
The post-trader looked after the galloping
Lin. “What’s he quitting his job
for?” he asked the foreman.
“Same as most of ’em quit.”
“Nothing?”
“Nothing.”
“Been satisfactory?”
“Never had a boy more so.
Good-hearted, willing, a plumb dare-devil with a horse.”
“And worthless,” suggested the post-trader.
“Well not yet. He’s headed
that way.”
“Been punching cattle long?”
“Came in the country about seventy-eight,
I believe, and rode for the Bordeaux Outfit most a
year, and quit. Blew in at Cheyenne till he went
broke, and worked over on to the Platte. Rode
for the C. Y. Outfit most a year, and quit. Blew
in at Buffalo. Rode for Balaam awhile on Butte
Creek. Broke his leg. Went to the Drybone
Hospital, and when the fracture was commencing to
knit pretty good he broke it again at the hog-ranch
across the bridge. Next time you’re in Cheyenne
get Dr. Barker to tell you about that. McLean
drifted to Green River last year and went up over
on to Snake, and up Snake, and was around with a prospecting
outfit on Galena Creek by Pitchstone Canyon. Seems
he got interested in some Dutchwoman up there, but
she had trouble died, I think they said and
he came down by Meteetsee to Wind River. He’s
liable to go to Mexico or Africa next.”
“If you need him,” said
the post-trader, closing his ledger, “you can
offer him five more a month.”
“That’ll not hold him.”
“Well, let him go. Have
a cigar. The bishop is expected for Sunday, and
I’ve got to see his room is fixed up for him.”
“The bishop!” said the foreman. “I’ve
heard him highly spoken of.”
“You can hear him preach to-morrow. The
bishop is a good man.”
“He’s better than that;
he’s a man,” stated the foreman “at
least so they tell me.”
Now, saving an Indian dance, scarce
any possible event at the Shoshone agency could assemble
in one spot so many sorts of inhabitants as a visit
from this bishop. Inhabitants of four colors gathered
to view the wolf-dance this afternoon red
men, white men, black men, yellow men. Next day,
three sorts came to church at the agency. The
Chinese laundry was absent. But because, indeed
(as the foreman said), the bishop was not only a good
man but a man, Wyoming held him in respect and went
to look at him. He stood in the agency church
and held the Episcopal service this Sunday morning
for some brightly glittering army officers and their
families, some white cavalry, and some black infantry;
the agency doctor, the post-trader, his foreman, the
government scout, three gamblers, the waiter-girl
from the hotel, the stage-driver, who was there because
she was; old Chief Washakie, white-haired and royal
in blankets, with two royal Utes splendid beside
him; one benchful of squatting Indian children, silent
and marvelling; and, on the back bench, the commanding
officer’s new hired-girl, and, beside her, Lin
McLean.
Mr. McLean’s hours were already
various and successful. Even at the wolf-dance,
before he had wearied of its monotonous drumming and
pageant, his roving eye had rested upon a girl whose
eyes he caught resting upon him. A look, an approach,
a word, and each was soon content with the other.
Then, when her duties called her to the post from him
and the stream’s border, with a promise for next
day he sought the hotel and found the three gamblers
anxious to make his acquaintance; for when a cow-puncher
has his pay many people will take an interest in him.
The three gamblers did not know that Mr. McLean could
play cards. He left them late in the evening
fat with their money, and sought the tepees of the
Arapahoes. They lived across the road from the
Shoshones, and among their tents the boy remained
until morning. He was here in church now, keeping
his promise to see the bishop with the girl of yesterday;
and while he gravely looked at the bishop, Miss Sabina
Stone allowed his arm to encircle her waist.
No soldier had achieved this yet, but Lin was the
first cow-puncher she had seen, and he had given her
the handkerchief from round his neck.
The quiet air blew in through the
windows and door, the pure, light breath from the
mountains; only, passing over their foot-hills it had
caught and carried the clear aroma of the sage-brush.
This it brought into church, and with this seemed
also to float the peace and great silence of the plains.
The little melodeon in the corner, played by one of
the ladies at the post, had finished accompanying the
hymn, and now it prolonged a few closing chords while
the bishop paused before his address, resting his
keen eyes on the people. He was dressed in a
plain suit of black with a narrow black tie. This
was because the Union Pacific Railroad, while it had
delivered him correctly at Green River, had despatched
his robes towards Cheyenne.
Without citing chapter and verse the bishop began:
“And he arose, and came to his
father. But when he was yet a great way off,
his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and
fell on his neck and kissed him.”
The bishop told the story of that
surpassing parable, and then proceeded to draw from
it a discourse fitted to the drifting destinies in
whose presence he found himself for one solitary morning.
He spoke unlike many clergymen. His words were
chiefly those which the people round him used, and
his voice was more like earnest talking than preaching.
Miss Sabina Stone felt the arm of
her cow-puncher loosen slightly, and she looked at
him. But he was looking at the bishop, no longer
gravely but with wide-open eyes, alert. When
the narrative reached the elder brother in the field,
and how he came to the house and heard sounds of music
and dancing, Miss Stone drew away from her companion
and let him watch the bishop, since he seemed to prefer
that. She took to reading hymns vindictively.
The bishop himself noted the sun-browned boy face
and the wide-open eyes. He was too far away to
see anything but the alert, listening position of
the young cow-puncher. He could not discern how
that, after he had left the music and dancing and begun
to draw morals, attention faded from those eyes that
seemed to watch him, and they filled with dreaminess.
It was very hot in church. Chief Washakie went
to sleep, and so did a corporal; but Lin McLean sat
in the same alert position till Miss Stone pulled
him and asked if he intended to sit down through the
hymn. Then church was out. Officers, Indians,
and all the people dispersed through the great sunshine
to their dwellings, and the cow-puncher rode beside
Sabina in silence.
“What are you studying over,
Mr. McLean?” inquired the lady, after a hundred
yards.
“Did you ever taste steamed
Duxbury clams?” asked Lin, absently.
“No, indeed. What’s them?”
“Oh, just clams. Yu’
have drawn butter, too.” Mr. McLean fell
silent again.
“I guess I’ll be late
for settin’ the colonel’s table. Good-bye,”
said Sabina, quickly, and swished her whip across
the pony, who scampered away with her along the straight
road across the plain to the post.
Lin caught up with her at once and made his peace.
“Only,” protested Sabina,
“I ain’t used to gentlemen taking me out
and well, same as if I was a collie-dog.
Maybe it’s Wind River politeness.”
But she went riding with him up Trout
Creek in the cool of the afternoon. Out of the
Indian tepees, scattered wide among the flat levels
of sage-brush, smoke rose thin and gentle, and vanished.
They splashed across the many little running channels
which lead water through that thirsty soil, and though
the range of mountains came no nearer, behind them
the post, with its white, flat buildings and green
trees, dwindled to a toy village.
“My! but it’s far to everywheres
here,” exclaimed Sabina, “and it’s
little you’re sayin’ for yourself to-day,
Mr. McLean. I’ll have to do the talking.
What’s that thing now, where the rocks are?”
“That’s Little Wind River
Canyon,” said the young man. “Feel
like goin’ there, Miss Stone?”
“Why, yes. It looks real
nice and shady like, don’t it? Let’s.”
So Miss Stone turned her pony in that direction.
“When do your folks eat supper?” inquired
Lin.
“Half-past six. Oh, we’ve lots of
time! Come on.”
“How many miles per hour do
you figure that cayuse of yourn can travel?”
Lin asked.
“What are you a-talking about,
anyway? You’re that strange to-day,”
said the lady.
“Only if we try to make that
canyon, I guess you’ll be late settin’
the colonel’s table,” Lin remarked, his
hazel eyes smiling upon her. “That is,
if your horse ain’t good for twenty miles an
hour. Mine ain’t, I know. But I’ll
do my best to stay with yu’.”
“You’re the teasingest
man ” said Miss Stone, pouting.
“I might have knowed it was ever so much further
nor it looked.”
“Well, I ain’t sayin’
I don’t want to go, if yu’ was desirous
of campin’ out to-night.”
“Mr. McLean! Indeed, and
I’d do no such thing!” and Sabina giggled.
A sage-hen rose under their horses’
feet, and hurtled away heavily over the next rise
of ground, taking a final wide sail out of sight.
“Something like them partridges
used to,” said Lin, musingly.
“Partridges?” inquired Sabina.
“Used to be in the woods between
Lynn and Salem. Maybe the woods are gone by this
time. Yes, they must be gone, I guess.”
Presently they dismounted and sought the stream bank.
“We had music and dancing at
Thanksgiving and such times,” said Lin, his
wiry length stretched on the grass beside the seated
Sabina. He was not looking at her, but she took
a pleasure in watching him, his curly head and bronze
face, against which the young mustache showed to its
full advantage.
“I expect you used to dance
a lot,” remarked Sabina, for a subject.
“Yes. Do yu’ know the Portland Fancy?”
Sabina did not, and her subject died away.
“Did anybody ever tell you you had good eyes?”
she inquired next.
“Why, sure,” said Lin,
waking for a moment; “but I like your color best.
A girl’s eyes will mostly beat a man’s.”
“Indeed, I don’t think
so!” exclaimed poor Sabina, too much expectant
to perceive the fatal note of routine with which her
transient admirer pronounced this gallantry.
He informed her that hers were like the sea, and she
told him she had not yet looked upon the sea.
“Never?” said he.
“It’s a turruble pity you’ve never
saw salt water. It’s different from fresh.
All around home it’s blue awful blue
in July around Swampscott and Marblehead
and Nahant, and around the islands. I’ve
swam there lots. Then our home bruck up and we
went to board in Boston.” He snapped off
a flower in reach of his long arm. Suddenly all
dreaminess left him.
“I wonder if you’ll be
settin’ the colonel’s table when I come
back?” he said.
Miss Stone was at a loss.
“I’m goin’ East to-morrow East,
to Boston.”
Yesterday he had told her that sixteen
miles to Lander was the farthest journey from the
post that he intended to make the farthest
from the post and her.
“I hope nothing ain’t happened to your
folks?” said she.
“I ain’t got no folks,”
replied Lin, “barring a brother. I expect
he is taking good care of himself.”
“Don’t you correspond?”
“Well, I guess he would if there
was anything to say. There ain’t been nothin’.”
Sabina thought they must have quarrelled,
but learned that they had not. It was time for
her now to return and set the colonel’s table,
so Lin rose and went to bring her horse. When
he had put her in her saddle she noticed him step
to his own.
“Why, I didn’t know you were lame!”
cried she.
“Shucks!” said Lin.
“It don’t cramp my style any.”
He had sprung on his horse, ridden beside her, leaned
and kissed her before she got any measure of his activity.
“That’s how,” said
he; and they took their homeward way galloping.
“No,” Lin continued, “Frank and
me never quarrelled. I just thought I’d
have a look at this Western country. Frank, he
thought dry-goods was good enough for him, and so
we’re both satisfied, I expect. And that’s
a lot of years now. Whoop ye!” he suddenly
sang out, and fired his six-shooter at a jack-rabbit,
who strung himself out flat and flew over the earth.
Both dismounted at the parade-ground
gate, and he kissed her again when she was not looking,
upon which she very properly slapped him; and he took
the horses to the stable. He sat down to tea at
the hotel, and found the meal consisted of black potatoes,
gray tea, and a guttering dish of fat pork. But
his appetite was good, and he remarked to himself
that inside the first hour he was in Boston he would
have steamed Duxbury clams. Of Sabina he never
thought again, and it is likely that she found others
to take his place. Fort Washakie was one hundred
and fifty miles from the railway, and men there were
many and girls were few.
The next morning the other passengers
entered the stage with resignation, knowing the thirty-six
hours of evil that lay before them. Lin climbed
up beside the driver. He had a new trunk now.
“Don’t get full, Lin,”
said the clerk, putting the mail-sacks in at the store.
“My plans ain’t settled
that far yet,” replied Mr. McLean.
“Leave it out of them,”
said the voice of the bishop, laughing, inside the
stage.
It was a cool, fine air. Gazing
over the huge plain down in which lies Fort Washakie,
Lin heard the faint notes of the trumpet on the parade
ground, and took a good-bye look at all things.
He watched the American flag grow small, saw the circle
of steam rising away down by the hot springs, looked
at the bad lands beyond, chemically pink and rose amid
the vast, natural, quiet-colored plain. Across
the spreading distance Indians trotted at wide spaces,
generally two large bucks on one small pony, or a
squaw and pappoose a bundle of parti-colored
rags. Presiding over the whole rose the mountains
to the west, serene, lifting into the clearest light.
Then once again came the now tiny music of the trumpet.
“When do yu’ figure on comin’ back?”
inquired the driver.
“Oh, I’ll just look around
back there for a spell,” said Lin. “About
a month, I guess.”
He had seven hundred dollars.
At Lander the horses are changed; and during this
operation Lin’s friends gathered and said, where
was any sense in going to Boston when you could have
a good time where you were? But Lin remained
sitting safe on the stage. Toward evening, at
the bottom of a little dry gulch some eight feet deep,
the horses decided it was a suitable place to stay.
It was the bishop who persuaded them to change their
minds. He told the driver to give up beating,
and unharness. Then they were led up the bank,
quivering, and a broken trace was spliced with rope.
Then the stage was forced on to the level ground,
the bishop proving a strong man, familiar with the
gear of vehicles. They crossed through the pass
among the quaking asps and the pines, and, reaching
Pacific Springs, came down again into open country.
That afternoon the stage put its passengers down on
the railroad platform at Green River; this was the
route in those days before the mid-winter catastrophes
of frozen passengers led to its abandonment. The
bishop was going west. His robes had passed him
on the up stage during the night. When the reverend
gentleman heard this he was silent for a very short
moment, and then laughed vigorously in the baggage-room.
“I can understand how you swear
sometimes,” he said to Lin McLean; “but
I can’t, you see. Not even at this.”
The cow-puncher was checking his own trunk to Omaha.
“Good-bye and good luck to you,”
continued the bishop, giving his hand to Lin.
“And look here don’t you think
you might leave that ’getting full’ out
of your plans?”
Lin gave a slightly shamefaced grin.
“I don’t guess I can, sir,” he said.
“I’m givin’ yu’ straight goods,
yu’ see,” he added.
“That’s right. But
you look like a man who could stop when he’d
had enough. Try that. You’re man enough and
come and see me whenever we’re in the same place.”
He went to the hotel. There were
several hours for Lin to wait. He walked up and
down the platform till the stars came out and the bright
lights of the town shone in the saloon windows.
Over across the way piano-music sounded through one
of the many open doors.
“Wonder if the professor’s
there yet?” said Lin, and he went across the
railroad tracks. The bartender nodded to him as
he passed through into the back room. In that
place were many tables, and the flat clicking and
rattle of ivory counters sounded pleasantly through
the music. Lin did not join the stud-poker game.
He stood over a table at which sat a dealer and a
player, very silent, opposite each other, and whereon
were painted sundry cards, numerals, and the colors
red and black in squares. The legend “Jacks
pay” was also clearly painted. The player
placed chips on whichever insignia of fortune he chose,
and the dealer slid cards (quite fairly) from the
top of a pack that lay held within a skeleton case
made with some clamped bands of tin. Sometimes
the player’s pile of chips rose high, and sometimes
his sumptuous pillar of gold pieces was lessened by
one. It was very interesting and pretty to see;
Lin had much better have joined the game of stud-poker.
Presently the eye of the dealer met the eye of the
player. After that slight incident the player’s
chip pile began to rise, and rose steadily, till the
dealer made admiring comments on such a run of luck.
Then the player stopped, cashed in, and said good-night,
having nearly doubled the number of his gold pieces.
“Five dollars’ worth,”
said Lin, sitting down in the vacant seat. The
chips were counted out to him. He played with
unimportant shiftings of fortune until a short while
before his train was due, and then, singularly enough,
he discovered he was one hundred and fifty dollars
behind the game.
“I guess I’ll leave the
train go without me,” said Lin, buying five
dollars’ worth more of ivory counters. So
that train came and went, removing eastward Mr. McLean’s
trunk.
During the hour that followed his
voice grew dogged and his remarks briefer, as he continually
purchased more chips from the now surprised and sympathetic
dealer. It was really wonderful how steadily Lin
lost just as steadily as his predecessor
had won after that meeting of eyes early in the evening.
When Lin was three hundred dollars
out, his voice began to clear of its huskiness and
a slight humor revolved and sparkled in his eye.
When his seven hundred dollars had gone to safer hands
and he had nothing left at all but some silver fractions
of a dollar, his robust cheerfulness was all back
again. He walked out and stood among the railroad
tracks with his hands in his pockets, and laughed
at himself in the dark. Then his fingers came
on the check for Omaha, and he laughed loudly.
The trunk by this hour must be nearing Rawlins; it
was going east anyhow.
“I’m following it, you
bet,” he declared, kicking the rail. “Not
yet though. Nor I’ll not go to Washakie
to have ’em josh me. And yonder lays Boston.”
He stretched his arm and pointed eastward. Had
he seen another man going on in this fashion alone
in the dark, among side-tracked freight cars, he would
have pitied the poor fool. “And I guess
Boston’ll have to get along without me for a
spell, too,” continued Lin. “A man
don’t want to show up plumb broke like that younger
son did after eatin’ with the hogs the bishop
told about. His father was a Jim-dandy, that
hog chap’s. Hustled around and set ’em
up when he come back home. Frank, he’d
say to me ‘How do you do, brother?’ and
he’d be wearin’ a good suit o’ clothes
and no, sir, you bet!”
Lin now watched the great headlight
of a freight train bearing slowly down into Green
River from the wilderness. Green River is the
end of a division, an epoch in every train’s
journey. Lanterns swung signals, the great dim
thing slowed to its standstill by the coal chute, its
locomotive moved away for a turn of repose, the successor
backed steaming to its place to tackle a night’s
work. Cars were shifted, heavily bumping and
parting.
“Hello, Lin!” A face was
looking from the window of the caboose.
“Hello!” responded Mr.
McLean, perceiving above his head Honey Wiggin, a
good friend of his. They had not met for three
years.
“They claimed you got killed
somewheres. I was sorry to hear it.”
Honey offered his condolence quite sincerely.
“Bruck my leg,” corrected
Lin, “if that’s what they meant.”
“I expect that’s it,”
said Honey. “You’ve had no other trouble?”
“Been boomin’,” said Lin.
From the mere undertone in their voices
it was plain they were good friends, carefully hiding
their pleasure at meeting.
“Wher’re yu’ bound?” inquired
Honey.
“East,” said Lin.
“Better jump in here, then. We’re
goin’ west.”
“That just suits me,” said Lin.
The busy lanterns wagged among the
switches, the steady lights of the saloons shone along
the town’s wooden façade. From the bluffs
that wall Green River the sweet, clean sage-brush
wind blew down in currents freshly through the coal-smoke.
A wrench passed through the train from locomotive
to caboose, each fettered car in turn strained into
motion and slowly rolled over the bridge and into
silence from the steam and the bells of the railroad
yard. Through the open windows of the caboose
great dull-red cinders rattled in, and the whistles
of distant Union Pacific locomotives sounded over
the open plains ominous and long, like ships at sea.
Honey and Lin sat for a while, making
few observations and far between, as their way is
between whom flows a stream of old-time understanding.
Mutual whiskey and silence can express much friendship,
and eloquently.
“What are yu’ doing at present?”
Lin inquired.
“Prospectin’.”
Now prospecting means hunting gold,
except to such spirits as the boy Lin. To these
it means finding gold. So Lin McLean listened
to the talk of his friend Honey Wiggin as the caboose
trundled through the night. He saw himself in
a vision of the near future enter a bank and thump
down a bag of gold-dust. Then he saw the new,
clean money the man would hand him in exchange, bills
with round zeroes half covered by being folded over,
and heavy, satisfactory gold pieces. And then
he saw the blue water that twinkles beneath Boston.
His fingers came again on his trunk check. He
had his ticket, too. And as dawn now revealed
the gray country to him, his eye fell casually upon
a mile-post: “Omaha, 876.” He
began to watch for them: 877, 878.
But the trunk would really get to Omaha.
“What are yu’ laughin’ about?”
asked Honey.
“Oh, the wheels.”
“Wheels?”
“Don’t yu’ hear
’em?” said Lin. “‘Variety,’
they keep a-sayin’. ‘Variety, variety.’”
“Huh!” said Honey, with scorn. “‘Ker-chunka-chunk’
’s all I make it.”
“You’re no poet,” observed Mr. McLean.
As the train moved into Evanston in
the sunlight, a gleam of dismay shot over Lin’s
face, and he ducked his head out of sight of the window,
but immediately raised it again. Then he leaned
out, waving his arm with a certain defiant vigor.
But the bishop on the platform failed to notice this
performance, though it was done for his sole benefit,
nor would Lin explain to the inquisitive Wiggin what
the matter was. Therefore, very naturally, Honey
drew a conclusion for himself, looked quickly out of
the window, and, being disappointed in what he expected
to see remarked, sulkily, “Do yu’ figure
I care what sort of a lookin’ girl is stuck on
yu’ in Evanston?” And upon this young Lin
laughed so loudly that his friend told him he had
never seen a man get so foolish in three years.
By-and-by they were in Utah, and,
in the company of Ogden friends, forgot prospecting.
Later they resumed freight trains and journeyed north
In Idaho they said good-bye to the train hands in the
caboose, and came to Little Camas, and so among the
mountains near Feather Creek. Here the berries
were of several sorts, and growing riper each day,
and the bears in the timber above knew this, and came
down punctually with the season, making variety in
the otherwise even life of the prospectors. It
was now August, and Lin sat on a wet hill making mud-pies
for sixty days. But the philosopher’s stone
was not in the wash at that placer, nor did Lin gather
gold-dust sufficient to cover the nail of his thumb.
Then they heard of an excitement at Obo, Nevada, and,
hurrying to Obo, they made some more mud-pies.
Now and then, eating their fat bacon
at noon, Honey would say, “Lin, wher’re
yu’ goin’?”
And Lin always replied, “East.”
This became a signal for drinks.
For beauty and promise, Nevada is
a name among names. Nevada! Pronounce the
word aloud. Does it not evoke mountains and clear
air, heights of untrodden snow and valleys aromatic
with the pine and musical with falling waters?
Nevada! But the name is all. Abomination
of desolation presides over nine-tenths of the place.
The sun beats down as on a roof of zinc, fierce and
dull. Not a drop of water to a mile of sand.
The mean ash-dump landscape stretches on from nowhere
to nowhere, a spot of mange. No portion of the
earth is more lacquered with paltry, unimportant ugliness.
There is gold in Nevada, but Lin and
Honey did not find it. Prospecting of the sort
they did, besides proving unfruitful, is not comfortable.
Now and again, losing patience, Lin would leave his
work and stalk about and gaze down at the scattered
men who stooped or knelt in the water. Passing
each busy prospector, Lin would read on every broad,
upturned pair of overalls the same label, “Levi
Strauss, N,” with a picture of two lusty
horses hitched to one of these garments and vainly
struggling to split them asunder. Lin remembered
he was wearing a label just like that too, and when
he considered all things he laughed to himself.
Then, having stretched the ache out of his long legs,
he would return to his ditch. As autumn wore
on, his feet grew cold in the mushy gravel they were
sunk in. He beat off the sand that had stiffened
on his boots, and hated Obo, Nevada. But he held
himself ready to say “East” whenever he
saw Honey coming along with the bottle. The cold
weather put an end to this adventure. The ditches
froze and filled with snow, through which the sordid
gravel heaps showed in a dreary fashion; so the two
friends drifted southward.
Near the small new town of Mesa, Arizona,
they sat down again in the dirt. It was milder
here, and, when the sun shone, never quite froze.
But this part of Arizona is scarcely more grateful
to the eye than Nevada. Moreover, Lin and Honey
found no gold at all. Some men near them found
a little. Then in January, even though the sun
shone, it quite froze one day.
“We’re seein’ the country, anyway,”
said Honey.
“Seein’ hell,” said
Lin, “and there’s more of it above ground
than I thought.”
“What’ll we do?” Honey inquired.
“Have to walk for a job a
good-payin’ job,” responded the hopeful
cow-puncher. And he and Honey went to town.
Lin found a job in twenty-five minutes,
becoming assistant to the apothecary in Mesa.
Established at the drug-store, he made up the simpler
prescriptions. He had studied practical pharmacy
in Boston between the ages of thirteen and fifteen,
and, besides this qualification, the apothecary had
seen him when he first came into Mesa, and liked him.
Lin made no mistakes that he or any one ever knew of;
and, as the mild weather began, he materially increased
the apothecary’s business by persuading him
to send East for a soda-water fountain. The ladies
of the town clustered around this entertaining novelty,
and while sipping vanilla and lemon bought knickknacks.
And the gentlemen of the town discovered that whiskey
with soda and strawberry syrup was delicious, and
produced just as competent effects. A group of
them were generally standing in the shop and shaking
dice to decide who should pay for the next, while
Lin administered to each glass the necessary ingredients.
Thus money began to come to him a little more steadily
than had been its wont, and he divided with the penniless
Honey.
But Honey found fortune quickly, too.
Through excellent card-playing he won a pinto from
a small Mexican horse-thief who came into town from
the South, and who cried bitterly when he delivered
up his pet pony to the new owner. The new owner,
being a man of the world and agile on his feet, was
only slightly stabbed that evening as he walked to
the dance-hall at the edge of the town. The Mexican
was buried on the next day but one.
The pony stood thirteen two, and was
as long as a steamboat. He had white eyelashes,
pink nostrils, and one eye was bright blue. If
you spoke pleasantly to him, he rose instantly on
his hind-legs and tried to beat your face. He
did not look as if he could run, and that was what
made him so valuable. Honey travelled through
the country with him, and every gentleman who saw
the pinto and heard Honey became anxious to get up
a race. Lin always sent money for Wiggin to place,
and he soon opened a bank account, while Honey, besides
his racing-bridle, bought a silver-inlaid one, a pair
of forty-dollar spurs, and a beautiful saddle richly
stamped. Every day (when in Mesa) Honey would
step into the drug-store and inquire, “Lin,
wher’re yu’ goin’?”
But Lin never answered any more.
He merely came to the soda-water fountain with the
whiskey. The passing of days brought a choked
season of fine sand and hard blazing sky. Heat
rose up from the ground and hung heavily over man
and beast. Many insects sat out in the sun rattling
with joy; the little tearing river grew clear from
the swollen mud, and shrank to a succession of standing
pools; and the fat, squatting cactus bloomed everywhere
into butter-colored flowers big as tulips in the sand.
There were artesian wells in Mesa, and the water did
not taste very good; but if you drank from the standing
pools where the river had been, you repaired to the
drug-store almost immediately. A troop of wandering
players came dotting along the railroad, and, reaching
Mesa, played a brass-band up and down the street,
and announced the powerful drama of “East Lynne.”
Then Mr. McLean thought of the Lynn marshes that lie
between there and Chelsea, and of the sea that must
look so cool. He forgot them while following
the painful fortunes of the Lady Isabel; but, going
to bed in the back part of the drug-store, he remembered
how he used to beat everybody swimming in the salt
water.
“I’m goin’,”
he said. Then he got up, and, striking the light,
he inspected his bank account. “I’m
sure goin’,” he repeated, blowing the
light out, “and I can buy the fatted calf myself,
you bet!” for he had often thought of the bishop’s
story. “You bet!” he remarked once
more in a muffled voice, and was asleep in a minute.
The apothecary was sorry to have him go, and Honey
was deeply grieved.
“I’d pull out with yer,”
he said, “only I can do business round Yuma and
westward with the pinto.”
For three farewell days Lin and Honey
roved together in all sorts of places, where they
were welcome, and once more Lin rode a horse and was
in his native element. Then he travelled to Deming,
and so through Denver to Omaha, where he was told
that his trunk had been sold for some months.
Besides a suit of clothes for town wear, it had contained
a buffalo coat for his brother something
scarce to see in these days.
“Frank’ll have to get
along without it,” he observed, philosophically,
and took the next eastbound train.
If you journey in a Pullman from Mesa
to Omaha without a waistcoat, and with a silk handkerchief
knotted over the collar of your flannel shirt instead
of a tie, wearing, besides, tall, high-heeled boots,
a soft, gray hat with a splendid brim, a few people
will notice you, but not the majority. New Mexico
and Colorado are used to these things. As Iowa,
with its immense rolling grain, encompasses you, people
will stare a little more, for you’re getting
near the East, where cow-punchers are not understood.
But in those days the line of cleavage came sharp-drawn
at Chicago. West of there was still tolerably
west, but east of there was east indeed, and the Atlantic
Ocean was the next important stopping-place.
In Lin’s new train, good gloves, patent-leathers,
and silence prevailed throughout the sleeping-car,
which was for Boston without change. Had not
home memories begun impetuously to flood his mind,
he would have felt himself conspicuous. Town clothes
and conventions had their due value with him.
But just now the boy’s single-hearted thoughts
were far from any surroundings, and he was murmuring
to himself, “To-morrow! tomorrow night!”
There were ladies in that blue plush
car for Boston who looked at Lin for thirty miles
at a stretch; and by the time Albany was reached the
next day one or two of them commented that he was the
most attractive-looking man they had ever seen!
Whereas, beyond his tallness, and wide-open, jocular
eyes, eyes that seemed those of a not highly conscientious
wild animal, there was nothing remarkable about young
Lin except stage effect. The conductor had been
annoyed to have such a passenger; but the cow-puncher
troubled no one, and was extremely silent. So
evidently was he a piece of the true frontier that
curious and hopeful fellow-passengers, after watching
him with diversion, more than once took a seat next
to him. He met their chatty inquiries with monosyllables
so few and so unprofitable in their quiet politeness
that the passengers soon gave him up. At Springfield
he sent a telegram to his brother at the great dry-goods
establishment that employed him.
The train began its homestretch after
Worcester, and whirled and swung by hills and ponds
he began to watch for, and through stations with old
wayside names. These flashed on Lin’s eye
as he sat with his hat off and his forehead against
the window, looking: Wellesley. Then, not
long after, Riverside. That was the Charles River,
and did the picnic woods used to be above the bridge
or below? West Newton; Newtonville; Newton.
“Faneuil’s next,” he said aloud in
the car, as the long-forgotten home-knowledge shone
forth in his recollection. The traveller seated
near said, “Beg pardon?” but, turning,
wondered at the all-unconscious Lin, with his forehead
pressed against the glass. The blue water flashed
into sight, and soon after they were running in the
darkness between high walls; but the cow-puncher never
moved, though nothing could be seen. When the
porter announced “Boston,” he started up
and followed like a sheep in the general exodus.
Down on the platform he moved along with the slow
crowd till some one touched him, and, wheeling round,
he seized both his brother’s hands and swore
a good oath of joy.
There they stood the long,
brown fellow with the silk handkerchief knotted over
his flannel shirt, greeting tremendously the spruce
civilian, who had a rope-colored mustache and bore
a fainthearted resemblance to him. The story
was plain on its face to the passers-by; and one of
the ladies who had come in the car with Lin turned
twice, and smiled gently to herself.
But Frank McLean’s heart did
not warm. He felt that what he had been afraid
of was true; and he saw he was being made conspicuous.
He saw men and women stare in the station, and he
saw them staring as he and his Western brother went
through the streets. Lin strode along, sniffing
the air of Boston, looking at all things, and making
it a stretch for his sleek companion to keep step
with him. Frank thought of the refined friends
he should have to introduce his brother to; for he
had risen with his salary, and now belonged to a small
club where the paying-tellers of banks played cards
every night, and the head clerk at the Parker House
was president. Perhaps he should not have to reveal
the cow-puncher to these shining ones. Perhaps
the cow-puncher would not stay very long. Of
course he was glad to see him again, and he would
take him to dine at some obscure place this first evening.
But this was not Lin’s plan. Frank must
dine with him, at the Parker House. Frank demurred,
saying it was he that should be host.
“And,” he added, “they
charge up high for wines at Parker’s.”
Then for the twentieth time he shifted a sidelong
eye over his brother’s clothes.
“You’re goin’ to
take your grub with me,” said Lin. “That’s
all right, I guess. And there ain’t any
‘no’ about it. Things is not the same
like as if father was livin’ (his
voice softened) and here to see me come
home. Now I’m good for several dinners with
wines charged up high, I expect, nor it ain’t
nobody in this world, barrin’ just Lin McLean,
that I’ve any need to ask for anything.
‘Mr. McLean,’ says I to Lin, ’can
yu’ spare me some cash?’ ‘Why, to
be sure, you bet!’ And we’ll start off
with steamed Duxbury clams.” The cow-puncher
slapped his pocket, where the coin made a muffled
chinking. Then he said, gruffly, “I suppose
Swampscott’s there yet?”
“Yes,” said Frank.
“It’s a dead little town, is Swampscott.”
“I guess I’ll take a look
at the old house tomorrow,” Lin pursued.
“Oh, that’s been pulled
down since I forget the year they improved
that block.”
Lin regarded in silence his brother,
who was speaking so jauntily of the first and last
home they had ever had.
“Seventy-nine is when it was,”
continued Frank. “So you can save the trouble
of travelling away down to Swampscott.”
“I guess I’ll go to the
graveyard, anyway,” said the cow-puncher in his
offish voice, and looking fixedly in front of him.
They came into Washington Street,
and again the elder McLean uneasily surveyed the younger’s
appearance.
But the momentary chill had melted
from the heart of the genial Lin. “After
to-morrow,” said he, laying a hand on his brother’s
shoulder, “yu’ can start any lead yu’
please, and I guess I can stay with yu’ pretty
close, Frank.”
Frank said nothing. He saw one
of the members of his club on the other side of the
way, and the member saw him, and Frank caught diverted
amazement on the member’s face. Lin’s
hand weighed on his shoulder, and the stress became
too great. “Lin,” said he, “while
you’re running with our crowd, you don’t
want to wear that style of hat, you know.”
It may be that such words can in some
way be spoken at such a time, but not in the way that
these were said. The frozen fact was irrevocably
revealed in the tone of Frank’s voice.
The cow-puncher stopped dead short,
and his hand slid off his brother’s shoulder.
“You’ve made it plain,” he said,
evenly, slanting his steady eyes down into Frank’s.
“You’ve explained yourself fairly well.
Run along with your crowd, and I’ll not bother
yu’ more with comin’ round and causin’
yu’ to feel ashamed. It’s a heap better
to understand these things at once, and save making
a fool of yourself any longer ‘n yu’ need
to. I guess there ain’t no more to be said,
only one thing. If yu’ see me around on
the street, don’t yu’ try any talk, for
I’d be liable to close your jaw up, and maybe
yu’d have more of a job explainin’ that
to your crowd than you’ve had makin’ me
see what kind of a man I’ve got for a brother.”
Frank found himself standing alone
before any reply to these sentences had occurred to
him. He walked slowly to his club, where a friend
joked him on his glumness.
Lin made a sore failure of amusing
himself that night; and in the bright, hot morning
he got into the train for Swampscott. At the
graveyard he saw a woman lay a bunch of flowers on
a mound and kneel, weeping.
“There ain’t nobody to
do that for this one,” thought the cow-puncher,
and looked down at the grave he had come to see, then
absently gazed at the woman.
She had stolen away from her daily
life to come here where her grief was shrined, and
now her heart found it hard to bid the lonely place
goodbye. So she lingered long, her thoughts sunk
deep in the motionless past. When she at last
looked up, she saw the tall, strange man re-enter
from the street among the tombs, and deposit on one
of them an ungainly lump of flowers. They were
what Lin had been able hastily to buy in Swampscott.
He spread them gently as he had noticed the woman do,
but her act of kneeling he did not imitate. He
went away quickly. For some hours he hung about
the little town, aimlessly loitering, watching the
salt water where he used to swim.
“Yu’ don’t belong
any more, Lin,” he miserably said at length,
and took his way to Boston.
The next morning, determined to see
the sights, he was in New York, and drifted about
to all places night and day, till his money was mostly
gone, and nothing to show for it but a somewhat pleasure-beaten
face and a deep hatred of the crowded, scrambling
East. So he suddenly bought a ticket for Green
River, Wyoming, and escaped from the city that seemed
to numb his good humor.
When, after three days, the Missouri
lay behind him and his holiday, he stretched his legs
and took heart to see out of the window the signs
of approaching desolation. And when on the fourth
day civilization was utterly emptied out of the world,
he saw a bunch of cattle, and, galloping among them,
his spurred and booted kindred. And his manner
took on that alertness a horse shows on turning into
the home road. As the stage took him toward Washakie,
old friends turned up every fifty miles or so, shambling
out of a cabin or a stable, and saying, in casual
tones, “Hello, Lin, where’ve you been at?”
At Lander, there got into the stage
another old acquaintance, the Bishop of Wyoming.
He knew Lin at once, and held out his hand, and his
greeting was hearty.
“It took a week for my robes
to catch up with me,” he said, laughing.
Then, in a little while, “How was the East?”
“First-rate,” said Lin,
not looking at him. He was shy of the conversation’s
taking a moral turn. But the bishop had no intention
of reverting at any rate, just now to
their last talk at Green River, and the advice he
had then given.
“I trust your friends were all well?”
he said.
“I guess they was healthy enough,” said
Lin.
“I suppose you found Boston much changed?
It’s a beautiful city.”
“Good enough town for them that likes it, I
expect,” Lin replied.
The bishop was forming a notion of
what the matter must be, but he had no notion whatever
of what now revealed itself.
“Mr. Bishop,” the cow-puncher
said, “how was that about that fellow you told
about that’s in the Bible somewheres? he
come home to his folks, and they well there
was his father saw him comin’” He
stopped, embarrassed.
Then the bishop remembered the wide-open
eyes, and how he had noticed them in the church at
the agency intently watching him. And, just now,
what were best to say he did not know. He looked
at the young man gravely.
“Have yu’ got a Bible?”
pursued Lin. “For, excuse me, but I’d
like yu’ to read that onced.”
So the bishop read, and Lin listened.
And all the while this good clergyman was perplexed
how to speak or if indeed to speak at this
time at all to the heart of the man beside
him for whom the parable had gone so sorely wrong.
When the reading was done, Lin had not taken his eyes
from the bishop’s face.
“How long has that there been wrote?”
he asked.
He was told about how long.
“Mr. Bishop,” said Lin,
“I ain’t got good knowledge of the Bible,
and I never figured it to be a book much on to facts.
And I tell you I’m more plumb beat about it’s
having that elder brother, and him being angry, down
in black and white two thousand years ago, than than
if I’d seen a man turn water into wine, for
I’d have knowed that ain’t so. But
the elder brother is facts dead-sure facts.
And they knowed about that, and put it down just the
same as life two thousand years ago!”
“Well,” said the bishop,
wisely ignoring the challenge as to miracles, “I
am a good twenty years older than you, and all that
time I’ve been finding more facts in the Bible
every day I have lived.”
Lin meditated. “I guess
that could be,” he said. “Yes; after
that yu’ve been a-readin’, and what I
know for myself that I didn’t know till lately,
I guess that could be.”
Then the bishop talked with exceeding
care, nor did he ask uncomfortable things, or moralize
visibly. Thus he came to hear how it had fared
with Lin his friend, and Lin forgot altogether about
its being a parson he was delivering the fulness of
his heart to. “And come to think,”
he concluded, “it weren’t home I had went
to back East, layin’ round them big cities,
where a man can’t help but feel strange all the
week. No, sir! Yu’ can blow in a thousand
dollars like I did in New York, and it’ll not
give yu’ any more home feelin’ than what
cattle has put in a stock-yard. Nor it wouldn’t
have in Boston neither. Now this country here”
(he waved his hand towards the endless sage-brush),
“seein’ it onced more, I know where my
home is, and I wouldn’t live nowheres else.
Only I ain’t got no father watching for me to
come up Wind River.”
The cow-puncher stated this merely
as a fact, and without any note of self-pity.
But the bishops face grew very tender, and he looked
away from Lin. Knowing his man for
had he not seen many of this kind in his desert diocese? he
forbore to make any text from that last sentence the
cow-puncher had spoken. Lin talked cheerfully
on about what he should now do. The round-up
must be somewhere near Du Noir Creek. He would
join it this season, but next he should work over to
the Powder River country. More business was over
there, and better chances for a man to take up some
land and have a ranch of his own. As they got
out at Fort Washakie, the bishop handed him a small
book, in which he had turned several leaves down,
carefully avoiding any page that related of miracles.
“You need not read it through,
you know,” he said, smiling; “just read
where I have marked, and see if you don’t find
some more facts. Goodbye and always
come and see me.”
The next morning he watched Lin riding
slowly out of the post towards Wind River, leading
a single pack-horse. By-and-by the little moving
dot went over the ridge. And as the bishop walked
back into the parade-ground, thinking over the possibilities
in that untrained manly soul, he shook his head sorrowfully.