Little dew fell on the night of July
first; the dawn brightened without mists; a hot sun
rose; the short summer of the plateau had begun.
As Hare rose, refreshed and happy
from his breakfast, his whistle was cut short by the
Indian.
“Ugh!” exclaimed Piute,
lifting a dark finger. Black Bolly had thrown
her nose-bag and slipped her halter, and she moved
toward the opening in the cedars, her head high, her
black ears straight up.
“Bolly!” called Mescal. The mare
did not stop.
“What the deuce?” Hare ran forward to
catch her.
“I never knew Bolly to act that
way,” said Mescal. “See she
didn’t eat half the oats. Well, Bolly Jack!
look at Wolf!”
The white dog had risen and stood
warily shifting his nose. He sniffed the wind,
turned round and round, and slowly stiffened with his
head pointed toward the eastern rise of the plateau.
“Hold, Wolf, hold!” called
Mescal, as the dog appeared to be about to dash away.
“Ugh!” grunted Piute.
“Listen, Jack; did you hear?” whispered
the girl.
“Hear what?”
“Listen.”
The warm breeze came down in puffs
from the crags; it rustled in the cedars and blew
fragrant whiffs of camp-fire smoke into his face; and
presently it bore a low, prolonged whistle. He
had never before heard its like. The sound broke
the silence again, clearer, a keen, sharp whistle.
“What is it?” he queried, reaching for
his rifle.
“Wild mustangs,” said Mescal.
“No,” corrected Piute, vehemently shaking
his head. “Clea, Clea.”
“Jack, he says ‘horse, horse.’
It’s a wild horse.”
A third time the whistle rang down
from the ridge, splitting the air, strong and trenchant,
the fiery, shrill challenge of a stallion.
Black Bolly reared straight up.
Jack ran to the rise of ground above
the camp, and looked over the cedars. “Oh!”
he cried, and beckoned for Mescal. She ran to
him, and Piute, tying Black Bolly, hurried after.
“Look! look!” cried Jack. He pointed
to a ridge rising to the left of the yellow crags.
On the bare summit stood a splendid stallion clearly
silhouetted against the ruddy morning sky. He
was an iron-gray, wild and proud, with long silver-white
mane waving in the wind.
“Silvermane! Silvermane!” exclaimed
Mescal.
“What a magnificent animal!”
Jack stared at the splendid picture for the moment
before the horse moved back along the ridge and disappeared.
Other horses, blacks and bays, showed above the sage
for a moment, and they, too, passed out of sight.
“He’s got some of his
band with him,” said Jack, thrilled with excitement.
“Mescal, they’re down off the upper range,
and grazing along easy. The wind favors us.
That whistle was just plain fight, judging from what
Naab told me of wild stallions. He came to the
hilltop, and whistled down defiance to any horse,
wild or tame, that might be below. I’ll
slip round through the cedars, and block the trail
leading up to the other range, and you and Piute close
the gate of our trail at this end. Then send
Piute down to tell Naab we’ve got Silvermane.”
Jack chose the lowest edge of the
plateau rim where the cedars were thickest for his
detour to get behind the wild band; he ran from tree
to tree, avoiding the open places, taking advantage
of the thickets, keeping away from the ridge.
He had never gone so far as the gate, but, knowing
where the trail led into a split in the crags, he climbed
the slope, and threaded a way over masses of fallen
cliff, until he reached the base of the wall.
The tracks of the wildhorse band were very fresh and
plain in the yellow trail. Four stout posts guarded
the opening, and a number of bars lay ready to be
pushed into place. He put them up, making a gate
ten feet high, an impregnable barrier. This done,
he hurried back to camp.
“Jack, Bolly will need more
watching to-day than the sheep, unless I let her loose.
Why, she pulls and strains so she’ll break that
halter.”
“She wants to go with the band; isn’t
that it?”
“I don’t like to think
so. But Father Naab doesn’t trust Bolly,
though she’s the best mustang he ever broke.”
“Better keep her in,”
replied Jack, remembering Naab’s warning.
“I’ll hobble her, so if she does break
loose she can’t go far.”
When Mescal and Jack drove in the
sheep that afternoon, rather earlier than usual, Piute
had returned with August Naab, Dave, and Billy, a
string of mustangs and a pack-train of burros.
“Hello, Mescal,” cheerily
called August, as they came into camp. “Well
Jack bless me! Why, my lad, how fine
and brown and yes, how you’ve filled
out!” He crushed Jack’s hand in his broad
palm, and his gray eyes beamed. “I’ve
not the gift of revelation but, Jack, you’re
going to get well.”
“Yes, I ” He
had difficulty with his enunciation, but he thumped
his breast significantly and smiled.
“Black sage and juniper!”
exclaimed August. “In this air if a man
doesn’t go off quickly with pneumonia, he’ll
get well. I never had a doubt for you, Jack and
thank God!”
He questioned Piute and Mescal about
the sheep, and was greatly pleased with their report.
He shook his head when Jack spread out the grizzly-pelt,
and asked for the story of the killing. Jack made
a poor showing with the tale and slighted his share
in it, but Mescal told it as it actually happened.
And Naab’s great hand resounded from Jack’s
shoulder. Then, catching sight of the pile of
coyote skins under the stone shelf, he gave vent to
his surprise and delight. Then he came back to
the object of his trip upon the plateau.
“So you’ve corralled Silvermane?
Well, Jack, if he doesn’t jump over the cliff
he’s ours. He can’t get off any other
way. How many horses with him?”
“We had no chance to count. I saw at least
twelve.”
“Good! He’s out with his picked band.
Weren’t they all blacks and bays?”
“Yes.”
“Jack, the history of that stallion
wouldn’t make you proud of him. We’ve
corralled him by a lucky chance. If I don’t
miss my guess he’s after Bolly. He has
been a lot of trouble to ranchers all the way from
the Nevada line across Utah. The stallions he’s
killed, the mares he’s led off! Well, Dave,
shall we thirst him out, or line up a long corral?”
“Better have a look around to-morrow,”
replied Dave. “It’ll take a lot of
chasing to run him down, but there’s not a spring
on the bench where we can throw up a trap-corral.
We’ll have to chase him.”
“Mescal, has Bolly been good since Silvermane
came down?”
“No, she hasn’t,” declared Mescal,
and told of the circumstance.
“Bolly’s all right,”
said Billy Naab. “Any mustang will do that.
Keep her belled and hobbled.”
“Silvermane would care a lot
about that, if he wanted Bolly, wouldn’t he?”
queried Dave in quiet scorn. “Keep her roped
and haltered, I say.”
“Dave’s right,”
said August. “You can’t trust a wild
mustang any more than a wild horse.”
August was right. Black Bolly
broke her halter about midnight and escaped into the
forest, hobbled as she was. The Indian heard her
first, and he awoke August, who aroused the others.
“Don’t make any noise,”
he said, as Jack came up, throwing on his coat.
“There’s likely to be some fun here presently.
Bolly’s loose, broke her rope, and I think Silvermane
is close. Listen sharp now.”
The slight breeze favored them, the
camp-fire was dead, and the night was clear and starlit.
They had not been quiet many moments when the shrill
neigh of a mustang rang out. The Naabs raised
themselves and looked at one another in the starlight.
“Now what do you think of that?” whispered
Billy.
“No more than I expected. It was Bolly,”
replied Dave.
“Bolly it was, confound her
black hide!” added August. “Now, boys,
did she whistle for Silvermane, or to warn him, which?”
“No telling,” answered
Billy. “Let’s lie low, and take a
chance on him coming close. It proves one thing you
can’t break a wild mare. That spirit may
sleep in her blood, maybe for years, but some time
it’ll answer to ”
“Shut up listen,” interrupted
Dave.
Jack strained his hearing, yet caught
no sound, except the distant yelp of a coyote.
Moments went by.
“There!” whispered Dave.
From the direction of the ridge came the faint rattling
of stones.
“They’re coming,” put in Billy.
Presently sharp clicks preceded the
rattles, and the sounds began to merge into a regular
rhythmic tramp. It softened at intervals, probably
when the horses were under the cedars, and strengthened
as they came out on the harder ground of the open.
“I see them,” whispered Dave.
A black, undulating line wound out
of the cedars, a line of horses approaching with drooping
heads, hurrying a little as they neared the spring.
“Twenty-odd, all blacks and
bays,” said August, “and some of them are
mustangs. But where’s Silvermane? hark!”
Out among the cedars rose the peculiar
halting thump of a hobbled horse trying to cover ground,
followed by snorts and crashings of brush and the
pound of plunging hoofs. The long black line stopped
short and began to stamp. Then into the starlit
glade below moved two shadows, the first a great gray
horse with snowy mane; the second, a small, shiny,
black mustang.
“Silvermane and Bolly!”
exclaimed August, “and now she’s broken
her hobbles.”
The stallion, in the fulfilment of
a conquest such as had made him king of the wild ranges,
was magnificent in action. Wheeling about her,
neighing, and plunging, he arched his splendid neck
and pushed his head against her. His action was
that of a master. Suddenly Black Bolly snorted
and whirled down the glade. Silvermane whistled
one blast of anger or terror and thundered after her.
They vanished in the gloom of the cedars, and the
band of frightened horses and mustangs clattered after
them.
“It’s one on me,”
remarked Billy. “That little mare played
us at the finish. Caught when she was a yearling,
broken better than any mustang we ever had, she has
helped us run down many a stallion, and now she runs
off with that big white-maned brute!”
“They’ll make a team,
and if they get out of here we’ll have to chase
them to the Great Salt Basin,” replied Dave.
“Mescal, that’s a well-behaved
mustang of yours,” said August; “not only
did she break loose, but she whistled an alarm to Silvermane
and his band. Well, roll in now, everybody, and
sleep.”
At breakfast the following day the
Naabs fell into a discussion upon the possibility
of there being other means of exit from the plateau
than the two trails already closed. They had
never run any mustangs on the plateau, and in the
case of a wild horse like Silvermane, who would take
desperate chances, it was advisable to know the ground
exactly. Billy and Dave taking their mounts from
the sheep-corral, where they had put them up for the
night, rode in opposite directions around the rim of
the plateau. It was triangular in shape, and some
six or seven miles in circumference; and the brothers
rode around it in less than an hour.
“Corralled,” said Dave, laconically.
“Good! Did you see him?
What kind of a bunch has he with him?” asked
his father.
“If we get the pick of the lot
it will be worth two weeks’ work,” replied
Dave. “I saw him, and Bolly, too. I
believe we can catch her easily. She was off
from the bunch, and it looks as though the mares were
jealous. I think we can run her into a cove under
the wall, and get her. Then Mescal can help us
run down the stallion. And you can look out on
this end for the best level stretch to drop the line
of cedars and make our trap.”
The brothers, at their father’s
nod, rode off into the forest. Naab had detained
the peon, and now gave him orders and sent him off.
“To-night you can stand on the
rim here, and watch him signal across to the top of
Echo Cliffs to the Navajos,” explained August
to Jack. “I’ve sent for the best
breaker of wild mustangs on the desert. Dave can
break mustangs, and Piute is very good; but I want
the best man in the country, because this is a grand
horse, and I intend to give him to you.”
“To me!” exclaimed Hare.
“Yes, and if he’s broken
right at the start, he’ll serve you faithfully,
and not try to bite your arm off every day, or kick
your brains out. No white man can break a wild
mustang to the best advantage.”
“Why is that?”
“I don’t know. To
be truthful, I have an idea it’s bad temper and
lack of patience. Just wait till you see this
Navajo go at Silvermane!”
After Mescal and Piute drove down
the sheep, Jack accompanied Naab to the corral.
“I’ve brought up your
saddle,” said Naab, “and you can put it
on any mustang here.”
What a pleasure it was to be in the
saddle again, and to feel strength to remain there!
He rode with August all over the western end of the
plateau. They came at length to a strip of ground,
higher than the bordering forest, which was comparatively
free of cedars and brush; and when August had surveyed
it once he slapped his knee with satisfaction.
“Fine, better than I hoped for!
This stretch is about a mile long, and narrow at this
end. Now, Jack, you see the other side faces the
rim, this side the forest, and at the end here is
a wall of rock; luckily it curves in a half circle,
which will save us work. We’ll cut cedars,
drag them in line, and make a big corral against the
rock. From the opening in the corral we’ll
build two fences of trees; then we’ll chase
Silvermane till he’s done, run him down into
this level, and turn him inside the fence. No
horse can break through a close line of cedars.
He’ll run till he’s in the corral, and
then we’ll rope him.”
“Great!” said Jack, all
enthusiasm. “But isn’t it going to
take a lot of work?”
“Rather,” said August,
dryly. “It’ll take a week to cut and
drag the cedars, let alone to tire out that wild stallion.
When the finish comes you want to be on that ledge
where we’ll have the corral.”
They returned to camp and prepared
supper. Mescal and Piute soon arrived, and, later,
Dave and Billy on jaded mustangs. Black Bolly
limped behind, stretching a long halter, an unhappy
mustang with dusty, foam-stained coat and hanging
head.
“Not bad,” said August,
examining the lame leg. “She’ll be
fit in a few days, long before we need her to help
run down Silvermane. Bring the liniment and a
cloth, one of you, and put her in the sheep-corral
to-night.”
Mescal’s love for the mustang
shone in her eyes while she smoothed out the crumpled
mane, and petted the slender neck.
“Bolly, to think you’d
do it!” And Bolly dropped her head as though
really ashamed.
When darkness fell they gathered on
the rim to watch the signals. A fire blazed out
of the black void below, and as they waited it brightened
and flamed higher.
“Ugh!” said Piute, pointing
across to the dark line of cliffs.
“Of course he’d see it
first,” laughed Naab. “Dave, have
you caught it yet? Jack, see if you can make
out a fire over on Echo Cliffs.”
“No, I don’t see any light,
except that white star. Have you seen it?”
“Long ago,” replied Naab.
“Here, sight along my finger, and narrow your
eyes down.”
“I believe I see it yes, I’m
sure.”
“Good. How about you, Mescal?”
“Yes,” she replied.
Jack was amused, for Dave insisted
that he had been next to the Indian, and Billy claimed
priority to all of them. To these men bred on
the desert keen sight was preeminently the chief of
gifts.
“Jack, look sharp!” said
August. “Peon is blanketing his fire.
See the flicker? One, two one, two one.
Now for the answer.”
Jack peered out into the shadowy space,
star-studded above, ebony below. Far across the
depths shone a pinpoint of steady light. The Indian
grunted again, August vented his “ha!”
and then Jack saw the light blink like a star, go
out for a second, and blink again.
“That’s what I like to
see,” said August. “We’re answered.
Now all’s over but the work.”
Work it certainly was, as Jack discovered
next day. He helped the brothers cut down cedars
while August hauled them into line with his roan.
What with this labor and the necessary camp duties
nearly a week passed, and in the mean time Black Bolly
recovered from her lameness.
Twice the workers saw Silvermane standing
on open high ridges, restive and suspicious, with
his silver mane flying, and his head turned over his
shoulder, watching, always watching.
“It’d be worth something
to find out how long that stallion could go without
water,” commented Dave. “But we’ll
make his tongue hang out to-morrow. It’d
serve him right to break him with Black Bolly.”
Daylight came warm and misty; veils
unrolled from the desert; a purple curtain lifted
from the eastern crags; then the red sun burned.
Dave and Billy Naab mounted their
mustangs, and each led another mount by a halter.
“We’ll go to the ridge,
cut Silvermane out of his band and warm him up; then
we’ll drive him down to this end.”
Hare, in his eagerness, found the
time very tedious while August delayed about camp,
punching new holes in his saddle-girth, shortening
his stirrups, and smoothing kinks out of his lasso.
At last he saddled the roan, and also Black Bolly.
Mescal came out of her tent ready for the chase; she
wore a short skirt of buckskin, and leggings of the
same material. Her hair, braided, and fastened
at the back, was bound by a double band closely fitting
her black head. Hare walked, leading two mustangs
by the halters, and Naab and Mescal rode, each of them
followed by two other spare mounts. August tied
three mustangs at one point along the level stretch,
and three at another. Then he led Mescal and Jack
to the top of the stone wall above the corral, where
they had good view of a considerable part of the plateau.
The eastern rise of ground, a sage
and juniper slope, was in plain sight. Hare saw
a white flash; then Silvermane broke out of the cedars
into the sage. One of the brothers raced him half
the length of the slope, and then the other coming
out headed him off down toward the forest. Soon
the pounding of hoofs sounded through the trees nearer
and nearer. Silvermane came out straight ahead
on the open level. He was running easily.
“He hasn’t opened up yet,” said
August.
Hare watched the stallion with sheer
fascination; He ran seemingly without effort.
What a stride he had. How beautifully his silver
mane waved in the wind! He veered off to the
left, out of sight in the brush, while Dave and Billy
galloped up to the spot where August had tied the
first three mustangs. Here they dismounted, changed
saddles to fresh horses, and were off again.
The chase now was close and all down-hill
for the watchers. Silvermane twinkled in and
out among the cedars, and suddenly stopped short on
the rim. He wheeled and coursed away toward the
crags, and vanished. But soon he reappeared,
for Billy had cut across and faced him about.
Again he struck the level stretch. Dave was there
in front of him. He shot away to the left, and
flashed through the glades beyond. The brothers
saved their steeds, content to keep him cornered in
that end of the plateau. Then August spurred
his roan into the scene of action. Silvermane
came out on the one piece of rising ground beyond the
level, and stood looking backward toward the brothers.
When the great roan crashed through the thickets into
his sight he leaped as if he had been stung, and plunged
away.
The Naabs had hemmed him in a triangle,
Dave and Billy at the broad end, August at the apex,
and now the real race began. August chased him
up and down, along the rim, across to the long line
of cedars, always in the end heading him for the open
stretch. Down this he fled with flying mane,
only to be checked by the relentless brothers.
To cover this broad end of the open required riding
the like of which Hare had never dreamed of.
The brothers, taking advantage of the brief periods
when the stallion was going toward August, changed
their tired mustangs for fresh ones.
“Ho! Mescal!” rolled
out August’s voice. That was the call for
Mescal to put Black Bolly after Silvermane. Her
fleetness made the other mustangs seem slow.
All in a flash she was round the corral, with Silvermane
between her and the long fence of cedars. Uttering
a piercing snort of terror the gray stallion lunged
out, for the first time panic-stricken, and lengthened
his stride in a wonderful way. He raced down the
stretch with his head over his shoulder watching the
little black. Seeing her gaining, he burst into
desperate headlong flight. He saved nothing; he
had found his match; he won that first race down the
level but it had cost him his best. If he had
been fresh he might have left Black Bolly far behind,
but now he could not elude her.
August Naab let him run this time,
and Silvermane, keeping close to the fence, passed
the gate, ran down to the rim, and wheeled. The
black mustang was on him again, holding him in close
to the fence, driving him back down the stretch.
The brothers remorselessly turned
him, and now Mescal, forcing the running, caught him,
lashed his haunches with her whip, and drove him into
the gate of the corral.
August and his two sons were close
behind, and blocked the gate. Silvermane’s
race was nearly run.
“Hold here, boys,” said
August. “I’ll go in and drive him
round and round till he’s done, then, when I
yell, you stand aside and rope him as he comes out.”
Silvermane ran round the corral, tore
at the steep scaly walls, fell back and began his
weary round again and yet again. Then as sense
and courage yielded gradually to unreasoning terror,
he ran blindly; every time he passed the guarded gateway
his eyes were wilder, and his stride more labored.
“Now!” yelled August Naab.
Mescal drew out of the opening, and
Dave and Billy pulled away, one on each side, their
lassoes swinging loosely.
Silvermane sprang for the opening
with something of his old speed. As he went through,
yellow loops flashed in the sun, circling, narrowing,
and he seemed to run straight into them. One
loop whipped close round his glossy neck; the other
caught his head. Dave’s mustang staggered
under the violent shock, went to his knees, struggled
up and held firmly. Bill’s mount slid on
his haunches and spilled his rider from the saddle.
Silvermane seemed to be climbing into the air.
Then August Naab, darting through the gate in a cloud
of dust, shot his lasso, catching the right foreleg.
Silvermane landed hard, his hoofs striking fire from
the stones; and for an instant strained in convulsive
struggle; then fell heaving and groaning. In
a twinkling Billy loosened his lasso over a knot,
making of it a halter, and tied the end to a cedar
stump.
The Naabs stood back and gazed at their prize.
Silvermane was badly spent; he was
wet with foam, but no fleck of blood marred his mane;
his superb coat showed scratches, but none cut into
the flesh. After a while he rose, panting heavily,
and trembling in every muscle. He was a beaten
horse; the noble head was bowed; yet he showed no
viciousness, only the fear of a trapped animal.
He eyed Black Bolly and then the halter, as though
he had divined the fatal connection between them.