For a few days after the capture of
Silvermane, a time full to the brim of excitement
for Hare, he had no word with Mescal, save for morning
and evening greetings. When he did come to seek
her, with a purpose which had grown more impelling
since August Naab’s arrival, he learned to his
bewilderment that she avoided him. She gave him
no chance to speak with her alone; her accustomed
resting-place on the rim at sunset knew her no more;
early after supper she retired to her tent.
Hare nursed a grievance for forty-eight
hours, and then, taking advantage of Piute’s
absence on an errand down to the farm, and of the
Naabs’ strenuous day with four vicious wild horses
in the corral at one time, he walked out to the pasture
where Mescal shepherded the flock.
“Mescal, why are you avoiding
me?” he asked. “What has happened?”
She looked tired and unhappy, and
her gaze, instead of meeting his, wandered to the
crags.
“Nothing,” she replied.
“But there must be something.
You have given me no chance to talk to you, and I
wanted to know if you’d let me speak to Father
Naab.”
“To Father Naab? Why what about?”
“About you, of course and me that
I love you and want to marry you.”
She turned white. “No no!”
Hare paused blankly, not so much at
her refusal as at the unmistakable fear in her face.
“Why not?”
he asked presently, with an odd sense of trouble.
There was more here than Mescal’s habitual shyness.
“Because he’ll be terribly angry.”
“Angry I don’t understand.
Why angry?”
The girl did not answer, and looked
so forlorn that Hare attempted to take her in his
arms. She resisted and broke from him.
“You must never never do that again.”
Hare drew back sharply.
“Why not? What’s wrong? You
must tell me, Mescal.”
“I remembered.” She hung her head.
“Remembered what?”
“I am pledged to marry Father Naab’s eldest
son.”
For a moment Hare did not understand. He stared
at her unbelievingly.
“What did you say?” he asked, slowly.
Mescal repeated her words in a whisper.
“But but Mescal I
love you. You let me kiss you,” said Hare
stupidly, as if he did not grasp her meaning.
“You let me kiss you,” he repeated.
“Oh, Jack, I forgot,”
she wailed. “It was so new, so strange,
to have you up here. It was like a kind of dream.
And after after you kissed me I I
found out ”
“What, Mescal?”
Her silence answered him.
“But, Mescal, if you really
love me you can’t marry any one else,”
said Hare. It was the simple persistence of a
simple swain.
“Oh, you don’t know, you don’t know.
It’s impossible!”
“Impossible!” Hare’s
anger flared up. “You let me believe I had
won you. What kind of a girl are you? You
were not true. Your actions were lies.”
“Not lies,” she faltered, and turned her
face from him.
With no gentle hand he grasped her
arm and forced her to look at him. But the misery
in her eyes overcame him, and he roughly threw his
arms around her and held her close.
“It can’t be a lie.
You do care for me love me. Look at
me.” He drew her head back from his breast.
Her face was pale and drawn; her eyes closed tight,
with tears forcing a way out under the long lashes;
her lips were parted. He bowed to their sweet
nearness; he kissed them again and again, while the
shade of the cedars seemed to whirl about him.
“I love you, Mescal. You are mine I
will have you I will keep you I
will not let him have you!”
She vibrated to that like a keen strung
wire under a strong touch. All in a flash the
trembling, shame-stricken girl was transformed.
She leaned back in his arms, supple, pliant with quivering
life, and for the first time gave him wide-open level
eyes, in which there were now no tears, no shyness,
no fear, but a dark smouldering fire.
“You do love me, Mescal?”
“I I couldn’t help it.”
There was a pause, tense with feeling.
“Mescal, tell me about your being
pledged,” he said, at last.
“I gave him my promise because
there was nothing else to do. I was pledged to to
him in the church at White Sage. It can’t
be changed. I’ve got to marry Father
Naab’s eldest son.”
“Eldest son?” echoed Jack,
suddenly mindful of the implication. “Why!
that’s Snap Naab. Ah! I begin to see
light. That Mescal ”
“I hate him.”
“You hate him and you’re
pledged to marry him!... God! Mescal, I’d
utterly forgotten Snap Naab already has a wife.”
“You’ve also forgotten that we’re
Mormons.”
“Are you a Mormon?” he queried bluntly.
“I’ve been raised as one.”
“That’s not an answer.
Are you one? Do you believe any man under God’s
sky ought to have more than one wife at a time?”
“No. But I’ve been
taught that it gave woman greater glory in heaven.
There have been men here before you, men who talked
to me, and I doubted before I ever saw you. And
afterward I knew.”
“Would not Father Naab release you?”
“Release me? Why, he would
have taken me as a wife for himself but for Mother
Mary. She hates me. So he pledged me to Snap.”
“Does August Naab love you?”
“Love me? No. Not
in the way you mean perhaps as a daughter.
But Mormons teach duty to church first, and say such
love comes to the wives afterward.
But it doesn’t not in the women I’ve
seen. There’s Mother Ruth her
heart is broken. She loves me, and I can tell.”
“When was this this marriage to be?”
“I don’t know. Father
Naab promised me to his son when he came home from
the Navajo range. It would be soon if they found
out that you and I Jack, Snap Naab would
kill you!”
The sudden thought startled the girl. Her eyes
betrayed her terror.
“I mightn’t be so easy
to kill,” said Hare, darkly. The words came
unbidden, his first answer to the wild influences about
him. “Mescal, I’m sorry maybe
I’ve brought you unhappiness.
“No. No. To be with
you has been like sitting there on the rim watching
the desert, the greatest happiness I have ever known.
I used to love to be with the children, but Mother
Mary forbade. When I am down there, which is
seldom, I’m not allowed to play with the children
any more.”
“What can I do?” asked Hare, passionately.
“Don’t speak to Father
Naab. Don’t let him guess. Don’t
leave me here alone,” she answered low.
It was not the Navajo speaking in her now. Love
had sounded depths hitherto unplumbed; a quick, soft
impulsiveness made the contrast sharp and vivid.
“How can I help but leave you
if he wants me on the cattle ranges?”
“I don’t know. You
must think. He has been so pleased with what you’ve
done. He’s had Mormons up here, and two
men not of his Church, and they did nothing.
You’ve been ill, besides you’re different.
He will keep me with the sheep as long as he can,
for two reasons because I drive them best,
he says, and because Snap Naab’s wife must be
persuaded to welcome me in her home.”
“I’ll stay, if I have
to get a relapse and go down on my back again,”
declared Jack. “I hate to deceive him, but
Mescal, pledged or not I love you, and
I won’t give up hope.”
Her hands flew to her face again and
tried to hide the dark blush.
“Mescal, there’s one question
I wish you’d answer. Does August Naab think
he’ll make a Mormon of me? Is that the secret
of his wonderful kindness?”
“Of course he believes he’ll
make a Mormon of you. That’s his religion.
He’s felt that way over all the strangers who
ever came out here. But he’d be the same
to them without his hopes. I don’t know
the secret of his kindness, but I think he loves everybody
and everything. And Jack, he’s so good.
I owe him all my life. He would not let the Navajos
take me; he raised me, kept me, taught me. I
can’t break my promise to him. He’s
been a father to me, and I love him.”
“I think I love him, too,” replied Hare,
simply.
With an effort he left her at last
and mounted the grassy slope and climbed high up among
the tottering yellow crags; and there he battled with
himself. Whatever the charm of Mescal’s
surrender, and the insistence of his love, stern hammer-strokes
of fairness, duty, honor, beat into his brain his
debt to the man who had saved him. It was a long-drawn-out
battle not to be won merely by saying right was right.
He loved Mescal, she loved him; and something born
in him with his new health, with the breath of this
sage and juniper forest, with the sight of purple
canyons and silent beckoning desert, made him fiercely
tenacious of all that life had come to mean for him.
He could not give her up and yet
Twilight forced Hare from his lofty
retreat, and he trod his way campward, weary and jaded,
but victorious over himself. He thought he had
renounced his hope of Mescal; he returned with a resolve
to be true to August, and to himself; bitterness he
would not allow himself to feel. And yet he feared
the rising in him of a new spirit akin to that of
the desert itself, intractable and free.
“Well, Jack, we rode down the
last of Silvermane’s band,” said August,
at supper. “The Navajos came up and helped
us out. To-morrow you’ll see some fun,
when we start to break Silvermane. As soon as
that’s done I’ll go, leaving the Indians
to bring the horses down when they’re broken.”
“Are you going to leave Silvermane with me?”
asked Jack.
“Surely. Why, in three
days, if I don’t lose my guess, he’ll be
like a lamb. Those desert stallions can be made
into the finest kind of saddle-horses. I’ve
seen one or two. I want you to stay up here with
the sheep. You’re getting well, you’ll
soon be a strapping big fellow. Then when we
drive the sheep down in the fall you can begin life
on the cattle ranges, driving wild steers. There’s
where you’ll grow lean and hard, like an iron
bar. You’ll need that horse, too, my lad.”
“Why because he’s
fast?” queried Jack, quickly answering to the
implied suggestion.
August nodded gloomily. “I
haven’t the gift of revelation, but I’ve
come to believe Martin Cole. Holderness is building
an outpost for his riders close to Seeping Springs.
He has no water. If he tries to pipe my water ”
The pause was not a threat; it implied the Mormon’s
doubt of himself. “Then Dene is on the
march this way. He’s driven some of Marshall’s
cattle from the range next to mine. Dene got away
with about a hundred head. The barefaced robber
sold them in Lund to a buying company from Salt Lake.”
“Is he openly an outlaw, a rustler?” inquired
Hare.
“Everybody knows it, and he’s
finding White Sage and vicinity warmer than it was.
Every time he comes in he and his band shoot up things
pretty lively. Now the Mormons are slow to wrath.
But they are awakening. All the way from Salt
Lake to the border outlaws have come in. They’ll
never get the power on this desert that they had in
the places from which they’ve been driven.
Men of the Holderness type are more to be dreaded.
He’s a rancher, greedy, unscrupulous, but hard
to corner in dishonesty. Dene is only a bad man,
a gun-fighter. He and all his ilk will get run
out of Utah. Did you ever hear of Plummer, John
Slade, Boone Helm, any of those bad men?”
“No.”
“Well, they were men to fear.
Plummer was a sheriff in Idaho, a man high in the
estimation of his townspeople, but he was the leader
of the most desperate band of criminals ever known
in the West; and he instigated the murder of, or killed
outright, more than one hundred men. Slade was
a bad man, fatal on the draw. Helm was a killing
machine. These men all tried Utah, and had to
get out. So will Dene have to get out. But
I’m afraid there’ll be warm times before
that happens. When you get in the thick of it
you’ll appreciate Silvermane.”
“I surely will. But I can’t
see that wild stallion with a saddle and a bridle,
eating oats like any common horse, and being led to
water.”
“Well, he’ll come to your
whistle, presently, if I’m not greatly mistaken.
You must make him love you, Jack. It can be done
with any wild creature. Be gentle, but firm.
Teach him to obey the slightest touch of rein, to
stand when you throw your bridle on the ground, to
come at your whistle. Always remember this.
He’s a desert-bred horse; he can live on scant
browse and little water. Never break him of those
best virtues in a horse. Never feed him grain
if you can find a little patch of browse; never give
him a drink till he needs it. That’s one-tenth
as often as a tame horse. Some day you’ll
be caught in the desert, and with these qualities
of endurance Silvermane will carry you out.”
Silvermane snorted defiance from the
cedar corral next morning when the Naabs, and Indians,
and Hare appeared. A half-naked sinewy Navajo
with a face as changeless as a bronze mask sat astride
August’s blindfolded roan, Charger. He
rode bareback except for a blanket strapped upon the
horse; he carried only a long, thick halter, with a
loop and a knot. When August opened the improvised
gate, with its sharp bayonet-like branches of cedar,
the Indian rode into the corral. The watchers
climbed to the knoll. Silvermane snorted a blast
of fear and anger. August’s huge roan showed
uneasiness; he stamped, and shook his head, as if to
rid himself of the blinders.
Into the farthest corner of densely
packed cedar boughs Silvermane pressed himself and
watched. The Indian rode around the corral, circling
closer and closer, yet appearing not to see the stallion.
Many rounds he made; closer he got, and always with
the same steady gait. Silvermane left his corner
and tried another. The old unwearying round brought
Charger and the Navajo close by him. Silvermane
pranced out of his thicket of boughs; he whistled;
he wheeled with his shiny hoofs lifting. In an
hour the Indian was edging the outer circle of the
corral, with the stallion pivoting in the centre,
ears laid back, eyes shooting sparks, fight in every
line of him. And the circle narrowed inward.
Suddenly the Navajo sent the roan
at Silvermane and threw his halter. It spread
out like a lasso, and the loop went over the head of
the stallion, slipped to the knot and held fast, while
the rope tightened. Silvermane leaped up, forehoofs
pawing the air, and his long shrill cry was neither
whistle, snort, nor screech, but all combined.
He came down, missing Charger with his hoofs, sliding
off his haunches. The Indian, his bronze muscles
rippling, close-hauled on the rope, making half hitches
round his bony wrist.
In a whirl of dust the roan drew closer
to the gray, and Silvermane began a mad race around
the corral. The roan ran with him nose to nose.
When Silvermane saw he could not shake him, he opened
his jaws, rolled back his lip in an ugly snarl, his
white teeth glistening, and tried to bite. But
the Indian’s moccasined foot shot up under the
stallion’s ear and pressed him back. Then
the roan hugged Silvermane so close that half the
time the Navajo virtually rode two horses. But
for the rigidity of his arms, and the play and sudden
tension of his leg-muscles, the Indian’s work
would have appeared commonplace, so dexterous was he,
so perfectly at home in his dangerous seat. Suddenly
he whooped and August Naab hauled back the gate, and
the two horses, neck and neck, thundered out upon
the level stretch.
“Good!” cried August.
“Let him rip now, Navvy. All over but the
work, Jack. I feared Silvermane would spear himself
on some of those dead cedar spikes in the corral.
He’s safe now.”
Jack watched the horses plunge at
breakneck speed down the stretch, circle at the forest
edge, and come tearing back. Silvermane was pulling
the roan faster than he had ever gone in his life,
but the dark Indian kept his graceful seat. The
speed slackened on the second turn, and decreased
as, mile after mile, the imperturbable Indian held
roan and gray side to side and let them run.
The time passed, but Hare’s
interest in the breaking of the stallion never flagged.
He began to understand the Indian, and to feel what
the restraint and drag must be to the horse. Never
for a moment could Silvermane elude the huge roan,
the tight halter, the relentless Navajo. Gallop
fell to trot, and trot to jog, and jog to walk; and
hour by hour, without whip or spur or word, the breaker
of desert mustangs drove the wild stallion. If
there were cruelty it was in his implacable slow patience,
his farsighted purpose. Silvermane would have
killed himself in an hour; he would have cut himself
to pieces in one headlong dash, but that steel arm
suffered him only to wear himself out. Late that
afternoon the Navajo led a dripping, drooping, foam-lashed
stallion into the corral, tied him with the halter,
and left him.
Later Silvermane drank of the water
poured into the corral trough, and had not the strength
or spirit to resent the Navajo’s caressing hand
on his mane.
Next morning the Indian rode again
into the corral on blindfolded Charger. Again
he dragged Silvermane out on the level and drove him
up and down with remorseless, machine-like persistence.
At noon he took him back, tied him up, and roped him
fast. Silvermane tried to rear and kick, but
the saddle went on, strapped with a flash of the dark-skinned
hands. Then again Silvermane ran the level stretch
beside the giant roan, only he carried a saddle now.
At the first, he broke out with free wild stride as
if to run forever from under the hateful thing.
But as the afternoon waned he crept weariedly back
to the corral.
On the morning of the third day the
Navajo went into the corral without Charger, and roped
the gray, tied him fast, and saddled him. Then
he loosed the lassoes except the one around Silvermane’s
neck, which he whipped under his foreleg to draw him
down. Silvermane heaved a groan which plainly
said he never wanted to rise again. Swiftly the
Indian knelt on the stallion’s head; his hands
flashed; there was a scream, a click of steel on bone;
and proud Silvermane jumped to his feet with a bit
between his teeth.
The Navajo, firmly in the saddle,
rose with him, and Silvermane leaped through the corral
gate, and out upon the stretch, lengthening out with
every stride, and settling into a wild, despairing
burst of speed. The white mane waved in the wind;
the half-naked Navajo swayed to the motion. Horse
and rider disappeared in the cedars.
They were gone all day. Toward
night they appeared on the stretch. The Indian
rode into camp and, dismounting, handed the bridle-rein
to Naab. He spoke no word; his dark impassiveness
invited no comment. Silvermane was dust-covered
and sweat-stained. His silver crest had the same
proud beauty, his neck still the splendid arch, his
head the noble outline, but his was a broken spirit.
“Here, my lad,” said August
Naab, throwing the bridle-rein over Hare’s arm.
“What did I say once about seeing you on a great
gray horse? Ah! Well, take him and know
this: you’ve the swiftest horse in this
desert country.”