Soon the shepherds were left to a
quiet unbroken by the whistle of wild mustangs, the
whoop of hunters, the ring of iron-shod hoofs on the
stones. The scream of an eagle, the bleating of
sheep, the bark of a coyote were once more the only
familiar sounds accentuating the silence of the plateau.
For Hare, time seemed to stand still. He thought
but little; his whole life was a matter of feeling
from without. He rose at dawn, never failing
to see the red sun tip the eastern crags; he glowed
with the touch of cold spring-water and the morning
air; he trailed Silvermane under the cedars and thrilled
when the stallion, answering his call, thumped the
ground with hobbled feet and came his way, learning
day by day to be glad at sight of his master.
He rode with Mescal behind the flock; he hunted hour
by hour, crawling over the fragrant brown mats of
cedar, through the sage and juniper, up the grassy
slopes. He rode back to camp beside Mescal, drove
the sheep, and put Silvermane to his fleetest to beat
Black Bolly down the level stretch where once the
gray, even with freedom at stake, had lost to the
black. Then back to camp and fire and curling
blue smoke, a supper that testified to busy Piute’s
farmward trips, sunset on the rim, endless changing
desert, the wind in the cedars, bright stars in the
blue, and sleep so time stood still.
Mescal and Hare were together, or
never far apart, from dawn to night. Until the
sheep were in the corral, every moment had its duty,
from camp-work and care of horses to the many problems
of the flock, so that they earned the rest on the
rim-wall at sundown. Only a touch of hands bridged
the chasm between them. They never spoke of their
love, of Mescal’s future, of Jack’s return
to hearth; a glance and a smile, scarcely sad yet
not altogether happy, was the substance of their dream.
Where Jack had once talked about the canyon and desert,
he now seldom spoke at all. From watching Mescal
he had learned that to see was enough. But there
were moments when some association recalled the past
and the strangeness of the present faced him.
Then he was wont to question Mescal.
“What are you thinking of?”
he asked, curiously, interrupting their silence.
She leaned against the rocks and kept a changeless,
tranquil, unseeing gaze on the desert. The level
eyes were full of thought, of sadness, of mystery;
they seemed to look afar.
Then she turned to him with puzzled
questioning look and enigmatical reply. “Thinking?”
asked her eyes. “I wasn’t thinking,”
were her words.
“I fancied I don’t
know exactly what,” he went on. “You
looked so earnest. Do you ever think of going
to the Navajos?”
“No.”
“Or across that Painted Desert
to find some place you seem to know, or see?”
“No.”
“I don’t know why, but,
Mescal, sometimes I have the queerest ideas when I
catch your eyes watching, watching. You look at
once happy and sad. You see something out there
that I can’t see. Your eyes are haunted.
I’ve a feeling that if I’d look into them
I’d see the sun setting, the clouds coloring,
the twilight shadows changing; and then back of that
the secret of it all of you Oh!
I can’t explain, but it seems so.”
“I never had a secret, except
the one you know,” she answered. “You
ask me so often what I think about, and you always
ask me when we’re here.” She was
silent for a pause. “I don’t think
at all till you make me. It’s beautiful
out there. But that’s not what it is to
me. I can’t tell you. When I sit down
here all within me is is somehow stilled.
I watch and it’s different from what
it is now, since you’ve made me think. Then
I watch, and I see, that’s all.”
It came to Hare afterward with a little
start of surprise that Mescal’s purposeless,
yet all-satisfying, watchful gaze had come to be part
of his own experience. It was inscrutable to
him, but he got from it a fancy, which he tried in
vain to dispel, that something would happen to them
out there on the desert.
And then he realized that when they
returned to the camp-fire they seemed freed from this
spell of the desert. The blaze-lit circle was
shut in by the darkness; and the immensity of their
wild environment, because for the hour it could not
be seen, lost its paralyzing effect. Hare fell
naturally into a talkative mood. Mescal had developed
a vivacity, an ambition which contrasted strongly
with her silent moods; she became alive and curious,
human like the girls he had known in the East, and
she fascinated him the more for this complexity.
The July rains did not come; the mists
failed; the dews no longer freshened the grass, and
the hot sun began to tell on shepherds and sheep.
Both sought the shade. The flowers withered first all
the blue-bells and lavender patches of primrose, and
pale-yellow lilies, and white thistle-blossoms.
Only the deep magenta of cactus and vermilion of Indian
paint-brush, flowers of the sun, survived the heat.
Day by day the shepherds scanned the sky for storm-clouds
that did not appear. The spring ran lower and
lower. At last the ditch that carried water to
the corral went dry, and the margin of the pool began
to retreat. Then Mescal sent Piute down for August
Naab.
He arrived at the plateau the next
day with Dave and at once ordered the breaking up
of camp.
“It will rain some time,”
he said, “but we can’t wait any longer.
Dave, when did you last see the Blue Star waterhole?”
“On the trip in from Silver
Cup, ten days ago. The waterhole was full then.”
“Will there be water enough now?”
“We’ve got to chance it.
There’s no water here, and no springs on the
upper range where we can drive sheep; we’ve got
to go round under the Star.”
“That’s so,” replied
August. His fears needed confirmation, because
his hopes always influenced his judgment till no hope
was left. “I wish I had brought Zeke and
George. It’ll be a hard drive, though we’ve
got Jack and Mescal to help.”
Hot as it was August Naab lost no
time in the start. Piute led the train on foot,
and the flock, used to following him, got under way
readily. Dave and Mescal rode along the sides,
and August with Jack came behind, with the pack-burros
bringing up the rear. Wolf circled them all,
keeping the flanks close in, heading the lambs that
strayed, and, ever vigilant, made the drive orderly
and rapid.
The trail to the upper range was wide
and easy of ascent, the first of it winding under
crags, the latter part climbing long slopes. It
forked before the summit, where dark pine trees showed
against the sky, one fork ascending, the other, which
Piute took, beginning to go down. It admitted
of no extended view, being shut in for the most part
on the left, but there were times when Hare could
see a curving stream of sheep on half a mile of descending
trail. Once started down the flock could not
be stopped, that was as plain as Piute’s hard
task. There were times when Hare could have tossed
a pebble on the Indian just below him, yet there were
more than three thousand sheep, strung out in line
between them. Clouds of dust rolled up, sheets
of gravel and shale rattled down the inclines, the
clatter, clatter, clatter of little hoofs, the steady
baa-baa-baa filled the air. Save for the crowding
of lambs off the trail, and a jamming of sheep in
the corners, the drive went on without mishap.
Hare was glad to see the lambs scramble back bleating
for their mothers, and to note that, though peril
threatened at every steep turn, the steady down-flow
always made space for the sheep behind. He was
glad, too, when through a wide break ahead his eye
followed the face of a vast cliff down to the red
ground below, and he knew the flock would soon be
safe on the level.
A blast as from a furnace smote Hare
from this open break in the wall. The air was
dust-laden, and carried besides the smell of dust and
the warm breath of desert growths, a dank odor that
was unpleasant.
The sheep massed in a flock on the
level, and the drivers spread to their places.
The route lay under projecting red cliffs, between
the base and enormous sections of wall that had broken
off and fallen far out. There was no weathering
slope; the wind had carried away the smaller stones
and particles, and had cut the huge pieces of pinnacle
and tower into hollowed forms. This zone of rim
merged into another of strange contrast, the sloping
red stream of sand which flowed from the wall of the
canyon.
Piute swung the flock up to the left
into an amphitheatre, and there halted. The sheep
formed a densely packed mass in the curve of the wall.
Dave Naab galloped back toward August and Hare, and
before he reached them shouted out: “The
waterhole’s plugged!”
“What?” yelled his father.
“Plugged, filled with stone and sand.”
“Was it a cave-in?”
“I reckon not. There’s been no rain.”
August spurred his roan after Dave,
and Hare kept close behind them, till they reined
in on a muddy bank. What had once been a waterhole
was a red and yellow heap of shale, fragments of stones,
gravel, and sand. There was no water, and the
sheep were bleating. August dismounted and climbed
high above the hole to examine the slope; soon he strode
down with giant steps, his huge fists clinched, shaking
his gray mane like a lion.
“I’ve found the tracks!
Somebody climbed up and rolled the stones, started
the cave-in. Who?”
“Holderness’s men.
They did the same for Martin Cole’s waterhole
at Rocky Point. How old are the tracks?”
“Two days, perhaps. We
can’t follow them. What can be done?”
“Some of Holderness’s
men are Mormons, and others are square fellows.
They wouldn’t stand for such work as this, and
somebody ought to ride in there and tell them.”
“And get shot up by the men
paid to do the dirty work. No. I won’t
hear of it. This amounts to nothing; we seldom
use this hole, only twice a year when driving the
flock. But it makes me fear for Silver Cup and
Seeping Springs.”
“It makes me fear for the sheep,
if this wind doesn’t change.”
“Ah! I had forgotten the
river scent. It’s not strong to-night.
We might venture if it wasn’t for the strip
of sand. We’ll camp here and start the
drive at dawn.”
The sun went down under a crimson
veil; a dull glow spread, fan-shaped, upward; twilight
faded to darkness with the going down of the wind.
August Naab paced to and fro before his tired and thirsty
flock.
“I’d like to know,”
said Hare to Dave, “why those men filled up this
waterhole.”
“Holderness wants to cut us
off from Silver Cup Spring, and this was a half-way
waterhole. Probably he didn’t know we had
the sheep upland, but he wouldn’t have cared.
He’s set himself to get our cattle range and
he’ll stop at nothing. Prospects look black
for us. Father never gives up. He doesn’t
believe yet that we can lose our water. He prays
and hopes, and sees good and mercy in his worst enemies.”
“If Holderness works as far
as Silver Cup, how will he go to work to steal another
man’s range and water?”
“He’ll throw up a cabin,
send in his men, drive in ten thousand steers.”
“Well, will his men try to keep
you away from your own water, or your cattle?”
“Not openly. They’ll
pretend to welcome us, and drive our cattle away in
our absence. You see there are only five of us
to ride the ranges, and we’d need five times
five to watch all the stock.”
“Then you can’t stop this outrage?”
“There’s only one way,”
said Dave, significantly tapping the black handle
of his Colt. “Holderness thinks he pulls
the wool over our eyes by talking of the cattle company
that employs him. He’s the company himself,
and he’s hand and glove with Dene.”
“And I suppose, if your father
and you boys were to ride over to Holderness’s
newest stand, and tell him to get off there would be
a fight.”
“We’d never reach him
now, that is, if we went together. One of us alone
might get to see him, especially in White Sage.
If we all rode over to his ranch we’d have to
fight his men before we reached the corrals. You
yourself will find it pretty warm when you go out with
us on the ranges, and if you make White Sage you’ll
find it hot. You’re called ’Dene’s
spy’ there, and the rustlers are still looking
for you. I wouldn’t worry about it, though.”
“Why not, I’d like to
know?” inquired Hare, with a short laugh.
“Well, if you’re like
the other Gentiles who have come into Utah you won’t
have scruples about drawing on a man. Father says
the draw comes natural to you, and you’re as
quick as he is. Then he says you can beat any
rifle shot he ever saw, and that long-barrelled gun
you’ve got will shoot a mile. So if it
comes to shooting why, you can shoot.
If you want to run who’s going to
catch you on that white-maned stallion? We talked
about you, George and I; we’re mighty glad you’re
well and can ride with us.”
Long into the night Jack Hare thought
over this talk. It opened up a vista of the range-life
into which he was soon to enter. He tried to
silence the voice within that cried out, eager and
reckless, for the long rides on the windy open.
The years of his illness returned in fancy, the narrow
room with the lamp and the book, and the tears over
stories and dreams of adventure never to be for such
as he. And now how wonderful was life! It
was, after all, to be full for him. It was already
full. Already he slept on the ground, open to
the sky. He looked up at a wild black cliff,
mountain-high, with its windworn star of blue; he
felt himself on the threshold of the desert, with that
subtle mystery waiting; he knew himself to be close
to strenuous action on the ranges, companion of these
sombre Mormons, exposed to their peril, making their
cause his cause, their life his life. What of
their friendship, their confidence? Was he worthy?
Would he fail at the pinch? What a man he must
become to approach their simple estimate of him!
Because he had found health and strength, because
he could shoot, because he had the fleetest horse
on the desert, were these reasons for their friendship?
No, these were only reasons for their trust. August
Naab loved him. Mescal loved him; Dave and George
made of him a brother. “They shall have
my life,” he muttered.
The bleating of the sheep heralded
another day. With the brightening light began
the drive over the sand. Under the cliff the shade
was cool and fresh; there was no wind; the sheep made
good progress. But the broken line of shade crept
inward toward the flock, and passed it. The sun
beat down, and the wind arose. A red haze of fine
sand eddied about the toiling sheep and shepherds.
Piute trudged ahead leading the king-ram, old Socker,
the leader of the flock; Mescal and Hare rode at the
right, turning their faces from the sand-filled puffs
of wind; August and Dave drove behind; Wolf, as always,
took care of the stragglers. An hour went by
without signs of distress; and with half the five-mile
trip at his back August Naab’s voice gathered
cheer. The sun beat hotter. Another hour
told a different story the sheep labored;
they had to be forced by urge of whip, by knees of
horses, by Wolf’s threatening bark. They
stopped altogether during the frequent hot sand-blasts,
and could not be driven. So time dragged.
The flock straggled out to a long irregular line;
rams refused to budge till they were ready; sheep
lay down to rest; lambs fell. But there was an
end to the belt of sand, and August Naab at last drove
the lagging trailers out upon the stony bench.
The sun was about two hours past the
meridian; the red walls of the desert were closing
in; the V-shaped split where the Colorado cut through
was in sight. The trail now was wide and unobstructed
and the distance short, yet August Naab ever and anon
turned to face the canyon and shook his head in anxious
foreboding.
It quickly dawned upon Hare that the
sheep were behaving in a way new and singular to him.
They packed densely now, crowding forward, many raising
their heads over the haunches of others and bleating.
They were not in their usual calm pattering hurry,
but nervous, excited, and continually facing west
toward the canyon, noses up.
On the top of the next little ridge
Hare heard Silvermane snort as he did when led to
drink. There was a scent of water on the wind.
Hare caught it, a damp, muggy smell. The sheep
had noticed it long before, and now under its nearer,
stronger influence began to bleat wildly, to run faster,
to crowd without aim.
“There’s work ahead.
Keep them packed and going. Turn the wheelers,”
ordered August.
What had been a drive became a flight.
And it was well so long as the sheep headed straight
up the trail. Piute had to go to the right to
avoid being run down. Mescal rode up to fill his
place. Hare took his cue from Dave, and rode
along the flank, crowding the sheep inward. August
cracked his whip behind. For half a mile the flock
kept to the trail, then, as if by common consent,
they sheered off to the right. With this move
August and Dave were transformed from quiet almost
to frenzy. They galloped to the fore, and into
the very faces of the turning sheep, and drove them
back. Then the rear-guard of the flock curved
outward.
“Drive them in!” roared August.
Hare sent Silvermane at the deflecting
sheep and frightened them into line.
Wolf no longer had power to chase
the stragglers; they had to be turned by a horse.
All along the flank noses pointed outward; here and
there sheep wilder than the others leaped forward
to lead a widening wave of bobbing woolly backs.
Mescal engaged one point, Hare another, Dave another,
and August Naab’s roan thundered up and down
the constantly broken line. All this while as
the shepherds fought back the sheep, the flight continued
faster eastward, farther canyonward. Each side
gained, but the flock gained more toward the canyon
than the drivers gained toward the oasis.
By August’s hoarse yells, by
Dave’s stern face and ceaseless swift action,
by the increasing din, Hare knew terrible danger hung
over the flock; what it was he could not tell.
He heard the roar of the river rapids, and it seemed
that the sheep heard it with him. They plunged
madly; they had gone wild from the scent and sound
of water. Their eyes gleamed red; their tongues
flew out. There was no aim to the rush of the
great body of sheep, but they followed the leaders
and the leaders followed the scent. And the drivers
headed them off, rode them down, ceaselessly, riding
forward to check one outbreak, wheeling backward to
check another.
The flight became a rout. Hare
was in the thick of dust and din, of the terror-stricken
jumping mob, of the ever-starting, ever-widening streams
of sheep; he rode and yelled and fired his Colt.
The dust choked him, the sun burned him, the flying
pebbles cut his cheek. Once he had a glimpse
of Black Bolly in a melee of dust and sheep; Dave’s
mustang blurred in his sight; August’s roan
seemed to be double. Then Silvermane, of his
own accord, was out before them all.
The sheep had almost gained the victory;
their keen noses were pointed toward the water; nothing
could stop their flight; but still the drivers dashed
at them, ever fighting, never wearying, never ceasing.
At the last incline, where a gentle
slope led down to a dark break in the desert, the
rout became a stampede. Left and right flanks
swung round, the line lengthened, and round the struggling
horses, knee-deep in woolly backs, split the streams
to flow together beyond in one resistless river of
sheep. Mescal forced Bolly out of danger; Dave
escaped the right flank, August and Hare swept on with
the flood, till the horses, sighting the dark canyon,
halted to stand like rocks.
“Will they run over the rim?”
yelled Hare, horrified. His voice came to him
as a whisper. August Naab, sweat-stained in red
dust, haggard, gray locks streaming in the wind, raised
his arms above his head, hopeless.
The long nodding line of woolly forms,
lifting like the crest of a yellow wave, plunged out
and down in rounded billow over the canyon rim.
With din of hoofs and bleats the sheep spilled themselves
over the precipice, and an awful deafening roar boomed
up from the river, like the spreading thunderous crash
of an avalanche.
How endless seemed that fatal plunge!
The last line of sheep, pressing close to those gone
before, and yet impelled by the strange instinct of
life, turned their eyes too late on the brink, carried
over by their own momentum.
The sliding roar ceased; its echo,
muffled and hollow, pealed from the cliffs, then rumbled
down the canyon to merge at length in the sullen,
dull, continuous sound of the rapids.
Hare turned at last from that narrow
iron-walled cleft, the depth of which he had not seen,
and now had no wish to see; and his eyes fell upon
a little Navajo lamb limping in the trail of the flock,
headed for the canyon, as sure as its mother in purpose.
He dismounted and seized it to find, to his infinite
wonder and gladness, that it wore a string and bell
round its neck. It was Mescal’s pet.