For some reason the desert scene before
Lucy Bostil awoke varying emotions a sweet
gratitude for the fullness of her life there at the
Ford, yet a haunting remorse that she could not be
wholly content a vague loneliness of soul a
thrill and a fear for the strangely calling future,
glorious, unknown.
She longed for something to happen.
It might be terrible, so long as it was wonderful.
This day, when Lucy had stolen away on a forbidden
horse, she was eighteen years old. The thought
of her mother, who had died long ago on their way
into this wilderness, was the one drop of sadness
in her joy. Lucy loved everybody at Bostil’s
Ford and everybody loved her. She loved all the
horses except her father’s favorite racer, that
perverse devil of a horse, the great Sage King.
Lucy was glowing and rapt with love
for all she beheld from her lofty perch: the
green-and-pink blossoming hamlet beneath her, set between
the beauty of the gray sage expanse and the ghastliness
of the barren heights; the swift Colorado sullenly
thundering below in the abyss; the Indians in their
bright colors, riding up the river trail; the eagle
poised like a feather on the air, and a beneath him
the grazing cattle making black dots on the sage;
the deep velvet azure of the sky; the golden lights
on the bare peaks and the lilac veils in the far ravines;
the silky rustle of a canyon swallow as he shot downward
in the sweep of the wind; the fragrance of cedar,
the flowers of the spear-pointed mescal; the brooding
silence, the beckoning range, the purple distance.
Whatever it was Lucy longed for, whatever
was whispered by the wind and written in the mystery
of the waste of sage and stone, she wanted it to happen
there at Bostil’s Ford. She had no desire
for civilization, she flouted the idea of marrying
the rich rancher of Durango. Bostil’s sister,
that stern but lovable woman who had brought her up
and taught her, would never persuade her to marry
against her will. Lucy imagined herself like
a wild horse free, proud, untamed, meant
for the desert; and here she would live her life.
The desert and her life seemed as one, yet in what
did they resemble each other in what of
this scene could she read the nature of her future?
Shudderingly she rejected the red,
sullen, thundering river, with its swift, changeful,
endless, contending strife for that was
tragic. And she rejected the frowning mass of
red rock, upreared, riven and split and canyoned,
so grim and aloof for that was barren.
But she accepted the vast sloping valley of sage,
rolling gray and soft and beautiful, down to the dim
mountains and purple ramparts of the horizon.
Lucy did not know what she yearned for, she did not
know why the desert called to her, she did not know
in what it resembled her spirit, but she did know
that these three feelings were as one, deep in her
heart. For ten years, every day of her life,
she had watched this desert scene, and never had there
been an hour that it was not different, yet the same.
Ten years and she grew up watching, feeling till
from the desert’s thousand moods she assimilated
its nature, loved her bonds, and could never have
been happy away from the open, the color, the freedom,
the wildness. On this birthday, when those who
loved her said she had become her own mistress, she
acknowledged the claim of the desert forever.
And she experienced a deep, rich, strange happiness.
Hers always then the mutable and immutable
desert, the leagues and leagues of slope and sage
and rolling ridge, the great canyons and the giant
cliffs, the dark river with its mystic thunder of waters,
the pine-fringed plateaus, the endless stretch of
horizon, with its lofty, isolated, noble monuments,
and the bold ramparts with their beckoning beyond!
Hers always the desert seasons: the shrill, icy
blast, the intense cold, the steely skies, the fading
snows; the gray old sage and the bleached grass under
the pall of the spring sand-storms; the hot furnace
breath of summer, with its magnificent cloud pageants
in the sky, with the black tempests hanging here and
there over the peaks, dark veils floating down and
rainbows everywhere, and the lacy waterfalls upon
the glistening cliffs and the thunder of the red floods;
and the glorious golden autumn when it was always afternoon
and time stood still! Hers always the rides in
the open, with the sun at her back and the wind in
her face! And hers surely, sooner or later, the
nameless adventure which had its inception in the strange
yearning of her heart and presaged its fulfilment
somewhere down that trailless sage-slope she loved
so well!
Bostil’s house was a crude but
picturesque structure of red stone and white clay
and bleached cottonwoods, and it stood at the outskirts
of the cluster of green-inclosed cabins which composed
the hamlet. Bostil was wont to say that in all
the world there could hardly be a grander view than
the outlook down that gray sea of rolling sage, down
to the black-fringed plateaus and the wild, blue-rimmed
and gold-spired horizon.
One morning in early spring, as was
Bostil’s custom, he ordered the racers to be
brought from the corrals and turned loose on the slope.
He loved to sit there and watch his horses graze,
but ever he saw that the riders were close at hand,
and that the horses did not get out on the slope of
sage. He sat back and gloried in the sight.
He owned bands of mustangs; near by was a field of
them, fine and mettlesome and racy; yet Bostil had
eyes only for the blooded favorites. Strange it
was that not one of these was a mustang or a broken
wild horse, for many of the riders’ best mounts
had been captured by them or the Indians. And
it was Bostil’s supreme ambition to own a great
wild stallion. There was Plume, a superb mare
that got her name from the way her mane swept in the
wind when she was on the ran; and there was Two Face,
like a coquette, sleek and glossy and running and
the huge, rangy bay, Dusty Ben; and the black stallion
Sarchedon; and lastly Sage King, the color of the
upland sage, a racer in build, a horse splendid and
proud and beautiful.
“Where’s Lucy?” presently asked
Bostil.
As he divided his love, so he divided his anxiety.
Some rider had seen Lucy riding off,
with her golden hair flying in the wind. This
was an old story.
“She’s up on Buckles?” Bostil queried,
turning sharply to the speaker.
“Reckon so,” was the calm reply.
Bostil swore. He did not have a rider who could
equal him in profanity.
“Farlane, you’d orders.
Lucy’s not to ride them hosses, least of all
Buckles. He ain’t safe even for a man.”
“Wal, he’s safe fer Lucy.”
“But didn’t I say no?”
“Boss, it’s likely you
did, fer you talk a lot,” replied Farlane.
“Lucy pulled my hat down over my eyes told
me to go to thunder an’ then, zip!
she an’ Buckles were dustin’ it fer
the sage.”
“She’s got to keep out
of the sage,” growled Bostil. “It
ain’t safe for her out there.... Where’s
my glass? I want to take a look at the slope.
Where’s my glass?”
The glass could not be found.
“What’s makin’ them
dust-clouds on the sage? Antelope? ... Holley,
you used to have eyes better ’n me. Use
them, will you?”
A gray-haired, hawk-eyed rider, lean
and worn, approached with clinking spurs.
“Down in there,” said Bostil, pointing.
“Thet’s a bunch of hosses,” replied
Holley.
“Wild hosses?”
“I take ’em so, seein’ how they
throw thet dust.”
“Huh! I don’t like it. Lucy
oughtn’t be ridin’ round alone.”
“Wal, boss, who could catch
her up on Buckles? Lucy can ride. An’
there’s the King an’ Sarch right under
your nose the only hosses on the sage thet
could outrun Buckles.”
Farlane knew how to mollify his master
and long habit had made him proficient. Bostil’s
eyes flashed. He was proud of Lucy’s power
over a horse. The story Bostil first told to
any stranger happening by the Ford was how Lucy had
been born during a wild ride almost, as
it were, on the back of a horse. That, at least,
was her fame, and the riders swore she was a worthy
daughter of such a mother. Then, as Farlane well
knew, a quick road to Bostil’s good will was
to praise one of his favorites.
“Reckon you spoke sense for
once, Farlane,” replied Bostil, with relief.
“I wasn’t thinkin’ so much of danger
for Lucy.... But she lets thet half-witted Creech
go with her.”
“No, boss, you’re wrong,”
put in Holley, earnestly. “I know the girl.
She has no use fer Joel. But he jest
runs after her.”
“An’ he’s harmless,” added
Farlane.
“We ain’t agreed,” rejoined Bostil,
quickly. “What do you say, Holley?”
The old rider looked thoughtful and did not speak
for long.
“Wal, Yes an’ no,”
he answered, finally. “I reckon Lucy could
make a man out of Joel. But she doesn’t
care fer him, an’ thet settles thet....
An’ maybe Joel’s leanin’ toward the
bad.”
“If she meets him again I’ll rope her
in the house,” declared Bostil.
Another clear-eyed rider drew Bostil’s
attention from the gray waste of rolling sage.
“Bostil, look! Look at
the King! He’s watchin’ fer somethin’....
An’ so’s Sarch.”
The two horses named were facing a
ridge some few hundred yards distant, and their heads
were aloft and ears straight forward. Sage King
whistled shrilly and Sarchedon began to prance.
“Boys, you’d better drive
them in,” said Bostil. “They’d
like nothin’ so well as gettin’ out on
the sage.... Hullo! what’s thet shootin’
up behind the ridge?”
“No more ‘n Buckles with
Lucy makin’ him run some,” replied Holley,
with a dry laugh.
“If it ain’t! ... Lord! look at him
come!”
Bostil’s anger and anxiety might
never have been. The light of the upland rider’s
joy shone in his keen gaze. The slope before him
was open, and almost level, down to the ridge that
had hidden the missing girl and horse. Buckles
was running for the love of running, as the girl low
down over his neck was riding for the love of riding.
The Sage King whistled again, and shot off with graceful
sweep to meet them; Sarchedon plunged after him; Two
Face and Plume jealously trooped down, too, but Dusty
Ben, after a toss of his head, went on grazing.
The gray and the black met Buckles and could not turn
in time to stay with him. A girl’s gay
scream pealed up the slope, and Buckles went lower
and faster. Sarchedon was left behind. Then
the gray King began to run as if before he had been
loping. He was beautiful in action. This
was play a game a race plainly
dominated by the spirit of the girl. Lucy’s
hair was a bright stream of gold in the wind.
She rode bareback. It seemed that she was hunched
low over Buckles with her knees high on his back scarcely
astride him at all. Yet her motion was one with
the horse. Again that wild, gay scream pealed
out call or laugh or challenge. Sage
King, with a fleetness that made the eyes of Bostil
and his riders glisten, took the lead, and then sheered
off to slow down, while Buckles thundered past.
Lucy was pulling him hard, and had him plunging to
a halt, when the rider Holley ran out to grasp his
bridle. Buckles was snorting and his ears were
laid back. He pounded the ground and scattered
the pebbles.
“No use, Lucy,” said Bostil.
“You can’t beat the King at your own game,
even with a runnin’ start.”
Lucy Bostil’s eyes were blue,
as keen as her father’s, and now they flashed
like his. She had a hand twisted in the horse’s
long mane, and as, lithe and supple, she slipped a
knee across his broad back she shook a little gantleted
fist at Bostil’s gray racer.
“Sage King, I hate you!”
she called, as if the horse were human. “And
I’ll beat you some day!”
Bostil swore by the gods his Sage
King was the swiftest horse in all that wild upland
country of wonderful horses. He swore the great
gray could look back over his shoulder and run away
from any broken horse known to the riders.
Bostil himself was half horse, and
the half of him that was human he divided between
love of his fleet racers and his daughter Lucy.
He had seen years of hard riding on that wild Utah
border where, in those days, a horse meant all the
world to a man. A lucky strike of grassy upland
and good water south of the Rio Colorado made him rich
in all that he cared to own. The Indians, yet
unspoiled by white men, were friendly. Bostil
built a boat at the Indian crossing of the Colorado
and the place became known as Bostil’s Ford.
From time to time his personality and his reputation
and his need brought horse-hunters, riders, sheep-herders,
and men of pioneer spirit, as well as wandering desert
travelers, to the Ford, and the lonely, isolated hamlet
slowly grew. North of the river it was more than
two hundred miles to the nearest little settlement,
with only a few lonely ranches on the road; to the
west were several villages, equally distant, but cut
off for two months at a time by the raging Colorado,
flooded by melting snow up in the mountains.
Eastward from the Ford stretched a ghastly, broken,
unknown desert of canyons. Southward rolled the
beautiful uplands, with valleys of sage and grass,
and plateaus of pine and cedar, until this rich rolling
gray and green range broke sharply on a purple horizon
line of upflung rocky ramparts and walls and monuments,
wild, dim, and mysterious.
Bostil’s cattle and horses were
numberless, and many as were his riders, he always
could use more. But most riders did not abide
long with Bostil, first because some of them were
of a wandering breed, wild-horse hunters themselves;
and secondly, Bostil had two great faults: he
seldom paid a rider in money, and he never permitted
one to own a fleet horse. He wanted to own all
the fast horses himself. And in those days every
rider, especially a wild-horse hunter, loved his steed
as part of himself. If there was a difference
between Bostil and any rider of the sage, it was that,
as he had more horses, so he had more love.
Whenever Bostil could not get possession
of a horse he coveted, either by purchase or trade,
he invariably acquired a grievance toward the owner.
This happened often, for riders were loath to part
with their favorites. And he had made more than
one enemy by his persistent nagging. It could
not be said, however, that he sought to drive hard
bargains. Bostil would pay any price asked for
a horse.
Across the Colorado, in a high, red-walled
canyon opening upon the river, lived a poor sheep-herder
and horse-trader named Creech. This man owned
a number of thoroughbreds, two of which he would not
part with for all the gold in the uplands. These
racers, Blue Roan and Peg, had been captured wild
on the ranges by Ute Indians and broken to racing.
They were still young and getting faster every year.
Bostil wanted them because he coveted them and because
he feared them. It would have been a terrible
blow to him if any horse ever beat the gray.
But Creech laughed at all offers and taunted Bostil
with a boast that in another summer he would see a
horse out in front of the King.
To complicate matters and lead rivalry
into hatred young Joel Creech, a great horseman, but
worthless in the eyes of all save his father, had
been heard to say that some day he would force a race
between the King and Blue Roan. And that threat
had been taken in various ways. It alienated
Bostil beyond all hope of reconciliation. It made
Lucy Bostil laugh and look sweetly mysterious.
She had no enemies and she liked everybody. It
was even gossiped by the women of Bostil’s Ford
that she had more than liking for the idle Joel.
But the husbands of these gossips said Lucy was only
tender-hearted. Among the riders, when they sat
around their lonely camp-fires, or lounged at the corrals
of the Ford, there was speculation in regard to this
race hinted by Joel Creech. There never had been
a race between the King and Blue Roan, and there never
would be, unless Joel were to ride off with Lucy.
In that case there would be the grandest race ever
run on the uplands, with the odds against Blue Roan
only if he carried double. If Joel put Lucy up
on the Roan and he rode Peg there would be another
story. Lucy Bostil was a slip of a girl, born
on a horse, as strong and supple as an Indian, and
she could ride like a burr sticking in a horse’s
mane. With Blue Roan carrying her light weight
she might run away from any one up on the King which
for Bostil would be a double tragedy, equally in the
loss of his daughter and the beating of his best-beloved
racer. But with Joel on Peg, such a race would
end in heartbreak for all concerned, for the King
would outrun Peg, and that would bring riders within
gunshot.
It had always been a fascinating subject,
this long-looked-for race. It grew more so when
Joel’s infatuation for Lucy became known.
There were fewer riders who believed Lucy might elope
with Joel than there were who believed Joel might
steal his father’s horses. But all the riders
who loved horses and all the women who loved gossip
were united in at least one thing, and that was that
something like a race or a romance would soon disrupt
the peaceful, sleepy tenor of Bostil’s Ford.
In addition to Bostil’s growing
hatred for the Creeches, he had a great fear of Cordts,
the horse-thief. A fear ever restless, ever watchful.
Cordts hid back in the untrodden ways. He had
secret friends among the riders of the ranges, faithful
followers back in the canyon camps, gold for the digging,
cattle by the thousand, and fast horses. He had
always gotten what he wanted except one
thing. That was a certain horse. And the
horse was Sage King.
Cordts was a bad man, a product of
the early gold-fields of California and Idaho, an
outcast from that evil wave of wanderers retreating
back over the trails so madly traveled westward.
He became a lord over the free ranges. But more
than all else he was a rider. He knew a horse.
He was as much horse as Bostil. Cordts rode into
this wild free-range country, where he had been heard
to say that a horse-thief was meaner than a poisoned
coyote. Nevertheless, he became a horse-thief.
The passion he had conceived for the Sage King was
the passion of a man for an unattainable woman.
Cordts swore that he would never rest, that he would
not die, till he owned the King. So there was
reason for Bostil’s great fear.