Classic Audiobook Collection - The Last Plainsmen by Zane Grey ~ Full Audiobook [adventure]
Episode Date: June 5, 2023The Last Plainsmen by Zane Grey audiobook. Genre: adventure Often listed as The Last of the Plainsmen, this Zane Grey classic follows the author on a rugged 1907 expedition across the Arizona desert ...and the North Rim of the Grand Canyon in the company of Charles 'Buffalo' Jones - a larger-than-life frontiersman famous not for killing, but for capturing wild animals alive. As the old West begins to vanish, Jones undertakes what feels like a final, defining mission: to track and take living cougars and other untamed creatures from a country of painted cliffs, deep canyons, and towering pines. Grey turns the journey into a vivid, boots-on-the-ground adventure, detailing brutal miles, makeshift camps, narrow escapes, and the tense, physical work of roping and handling dangerous animals without turning the hunt into slaughter. Along the way, the party faces the relentless demands of wilderness travel and uneasy encounters with the people and powers that still shape the frontier. Part travel narrative, part character portrait, the book asks what it means to master nature, and what it costs when an era - and its wildlife - is slipping away. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 00 (00:03:40) Chapter 01 (00:39:50) Chapter 02 (01:13:51) Chapter 03 (01:41:39) Chapter 04 (02:14:24) Chapter 05 (02:27:34) Chapter 06 (02:45:52) Chapter 07 (03:10:08) Chapter 08 (03:25:37) Chapter 09 (03:46:16) Chapter 10 (04:17:10) Chapter 11 (04:48:19) Chapter 12 (05:16:08) Chapter 13 (05:44:33) Chapter 14 (06:13:06) Chapter 15 (06:28:47) Chapter 16 (07:05:54) Chapter 17 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray, Prevatory Note.
Buffalo Jones needs no introduction to American sportsmen,
but to those of my readers who are unacquainted with him,
a few words may not be amiss.
He was born 62 years ago on the Illinois Prairie,
and he has devoted practically all of his life
to the pursuit of wild animals.
It has been a pursuit which owed its unflagging energy
an indomitable purpose
to a singular passion,
almost an obsession,
to capture alive, not to kill.
He has caught and broken the will
of every well-known wild-beast native
to Western North America.
Killing was repulsive to him.
He even disliked the sight of a sporting rifle.
Though for years, necessity compelled him
to earn his livelihood by supplying the meat of Buffalo
to the caravans crossing the plains.
At last seeing that the extinct,
of the noble beast was inevitable.
He smashed his rifle
over a wagon wheel and vowed
to save the species.
For ten years he labored,
pursuing, capturing, and taming Buffalo,
for which the West gave him fame
and the name Preserver
of the American Bison.
A civilization encroached upon the plains,
Buffalo Jones, ranged slowly westward
and, today, an isolated desert-bound plateau
on the north rim of the Grand Canyon of Arizona
is his home.
There, his buffalo brows with the Mustang and deer,
and are as free as ever they were on the rolling plains.
In the spring of 1907,
I was the fortunate companion of the old plainsman
on a trip across the desert
and a hunt in that wonderful country of yellow crags,
deep canyons, and giant pines.
I want to tell you about it.
I want to show the color and beauty
of those painted cliffs
and the long, brown-matted, blue-bell-dotted aisles
in the grand forests.
I want to give a suggestion of the tang
of the dry cool air.
And particularly,
I want to throw a little light upon the life
and nature of that strange character
and remarkable man, Buffalo Jones.
Happily in remembrance,
a writer can live over his experiences
and see once more
the moon-blanched silver mountain peaks
against the dark blue sky.
Hear the lonely sow of the night wind through the pines,
feel a dance of the wall,
wild expectation in the quivering pulse, the stir, the thrill, the joy of hard action and perilous
moments, the mystery of man's yearning for the unattainable. As a boy I read of Boone with the throbbing
heart and the silent moccasin vengeful Wenzel I loved. I poured over the deeds of later men,
Custer and Carson, those heroes of the plains, and as a man I came to see the wonder, the tragedy of
their lives and to write about them.
It has been my destiny.
What a happy fulfillment of my dreams of border spirit.
To live for a while in the fast, fading wild environment
which produced these great men with the last of the great plainsman.
Zane Gray.
End a prefatory note.
Chapter 1 of the last plainsman.
This is a Libre Fox recording.
All Libre Fox recordings are in the public domain.
Recording by Mike Vendetti.
The Last Plainsman.
Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 1.
The Arizona Desert
One afternoon, far out on the sun-baked waste of sage,
we made camp near a clump of withered pinion trees.
The cold desert wind came down upon us with a sudden darkness.
Even the Mormons, who were finding the trail for us across the drifting sands,
forgot to sing and pray at sundown.
We huddled around the campfire, a tired and silent little group.
When out of the lonely, melancholy nights,
some wandering Navajo stole like shadows to our fire.
We hailed their advent with delight.
They were good-natured Indians,
willing to barter a blanket or bracelet,
and one of them a tall gaunt fellow,
with the bearing of a chief, could speak a little English.
How, said he in a deep chest voice?
Hello, not a cutty, greeted Jim Emmett, the Mormon guide.
Ugh, answered the Indian.
Big pale face, buffalo Jones, big chief, buffalo man, introduced Emmett, indicating Jones.
How?
The Navajo spoke with dignity and extended a friendly hand.
Jones, big white chief, rope buffalo, tie up tight, continued Emmett, making motions with his arm as if he were whirling a lasso.
No big heap, small buffalo, said the Indian, holding his hand level with his knee and smiling broadly.
Jones, erect, rugged brawny, stood in the full light of the campfire.
He had a dark bronze and scrutable face, a stern mouth and square jaw,
keen eyes, half-closed from years of searching the wide plains and deep furrows wrinkling his cheeks.
A strange stillness enfolded his features, the tranquility earned from a long life of adventure.
He held up both muscular hands to the Navajo and spread out his fingers.
"'Rope buffalo, heap big buffalo, heap many one sun!'
The Indians straightened up, but kept his friendly smile.
"'Me big chief,' went on Jones.
"'Me go far north, land of little sticks, Naza, Naza, Napa,
"'rope muskot, rope white manateau of great slaves, Naza, Naza, Naza,' replied the
Navajo, pointing to the North Star.
No, no
Yes, me big pale face
Me come long way towards setting sun
Go cross big water
Go bucks skin
Sea wash chase Cougar
The Cougar a mountain lion
Is a Navajo god
And the Navajo hold him in as much fear
And reverence as do the great slave Indians
The muscocks
No kill Cougar
Continued Jones as the Indians' bold features
hardened
Run Cougar horseback
Run long way
"'Dogs chase Cougar, long time, chase Cougar up tree.
"'Me, Big Chief, me, Climb high up, lasso, Cougar, rope, Cougar,
Ticu, all tight.'
"'Navanaugh's solemn face relaxed.'
"'White man, heap fun, no?'
"'Yes,' cried Jones, extending his great arms.
"'Me strong, me rope Cougar, me Ty Cougar, right off, wigwam, keep Cougar alive.'
"'No,' replied the savage vehemently.
Yes, protested Jones, nodding earnestly.
No, answered the Navajo louder, raising his dark head.
Yes!
shouted Jones.
Big lie, the Indian thundered.
Jones joined good-naturedly in the laugh at his expense.
The Indian had crudely voiced a skepticism.
I had heard more delicately hinted in New York,
and singly enough, which had strengthened on our way west,
as we met ranchers, prospectors, and cowboys.
but those few men I had fortunately met who really knew Jones
more than overbalanced the doubt and ridicule cast upon him.
I recalled a scarred old veteran of the plains
who had talked to me in true western bluntness.
Say, young feller, I hear you couldn't get across the canyon
for the deep snow on the north rim.
Well, you're lucky.
Now you're hit to trail for New York and keep going.
Don't ever tackle the desert, especially with,
them Mormons. They've got water on the brain worsened religion. It's 250 miles from Flagstaff
to Jones Range. And only two drinks on the trail? I know there's here Buffalo Jones. I know
him way back in the 70s when he was doing them roping stunts that made him famous as the preserver of
the American bison. I know about that crazy trip of hisin to the barren lands after muskawks.
and I reckon, I can guess what he'll do over there in the sea-wash.
He'll rope cougars, sure he will, and watch him jump.
Jones would rope the devil and tie him down if the lassoon didn't burn.
Oh, he's hell on roping things,
and he's worse than hell on men and horses and dogs.
All that my well-meaning friend suggested made me, of course,
only the more eager to go with Jones,
where I had once been interested in the old buffalo hunter,
I was now fascinated.
And now I was with him in the desert
and seeing him as he was,
a simple, quiet man,
who fitted the mountains and the silences
and the long reaches of distance.
It does seem hard to believe all this about Jones,
remarked Judd, one of Emmett's men.
How could a man have the strength and a nerve?
And isn't it cruel to keep wild animals
in captivity. Isn't it against God's word? Quick as speech could flow, Jones quoted,
And God said, Let us make man in our image and give him dominion over the fish of the sea,
the fowls of the air, over the cattle, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon
the earth. Dominion over all the beasts of the field, repeated Jones, his big voice rolling out.
He clenched his huge fist and spread wide his long arms.
Dominion, that was God's word.
The power and intensity of him could be felt.
Then he relaxed, dropped his arm, and once more grew calm,
but he had shown a glimpse of the great strange and absorbing passion of his life.
Once he had told me how, when a mere child,
he had hazarded limb and neck to capture a fox squirrel,
how he had held on to the vicious little animal, though it bit his hand through,
how he had never learned to play the games of boyhood,
that when the youth of the Little Illinois Village were at play,
he roamed the prairies of the rolling wooded hills or watched the gopher hole.
That boy was father of the man, for sixty years an enduring passion for dominion over wild animals
had possessed him, and made his life an endless pursuit.
Our guests in Navajo's departed early,
and vanished silently in the gloom of the desert.
We settled down again into a quiet
that was broken only by the low chant-like song
of the praying Mormon.
Suddenly the hounds bristled.
And old mose, a surly and aggressive dog,
rose and barked at some real or imaginary desert prowler.
A sharp command from Jones made Moes crouch down,
and the other hounds cowered close together.
Better tie up the dogs, suggested Jones.
Like it not, coyotes run down here
from the hills. The hounds were my special delight, but Jones regarded them with considerable contempt.
When all was said, this was no small wonder, for that quintet of long-eared canines would have
tried the patience of a saint. Old Moes was a Missouri hound that Jones had procured in that state
of uncertain qualities, and the dog had grown old over coon trails. He was black and white,
grizzled and battle-scarred, and if ever a dog had an evil eye,
Mose was that dog.
He had a way of wagging his tail, an indeterminate, equivocal sort of wag,
as if he realized his ugliness and knew he stood little chance of making friends,
but was still hopeful and willing.
As for me, the first time he manifested this evidence of a good heart under a rough coat,
you won me forever.
To tell of Moses' derelictions up to that,
time would take more space than what a history of the whole trip. But the enumeration of several
incidents will at once stamp him as a dog of character, and will establish the fact that even if his
progenitors had never taken any blue ribbons, they had at least bequeathed him, fighting blood.
At Flagstaff we chained him in the yard of a livery stable. Next morning, we found him hanging by
his chain on the other side of an eight-foot fence.
We took him down, expecting to have the sorrowful duty of burying him.
But Moes shook himself, wagged his tail, and then pitched into the livery-stable dog.
As a matter of fact, fighting was his forte.
He whipped all the dogs in Flagstaff, and when our bloodhounds came on from California,
he put three of them, or de-combat at once, and subdued the pup with a savage growl.
His crowning feet, however, made even the stooticle Jones open his mouth.
in a maze. We'd taken Moes to Eltovar at the Grand Canyon and finding it impossible to get over to
the North Rim. We left him with one of Jones's men called Rust, who was working on the Canyon Trail.
Rust's instructions were to bring Moes to Flagstaff in two weeks. He brought the dog a little
ahead of time and roared his appreciation of the relief it was to get the responsibility off his
hands. And he related many strange things, most striking of which was how Moves had broken his
chain and plunged into the raging Colorado River and tried to swim it just above the terrible
stock-dagger rackpids. Rust and his fellow workmen watched the dog disappear in the yellow,
wrestling, turbulent whirl of waters, and had hurt his knell in the booming roar of the falls. Nothing but a
fish could live in that current. Nothing but a bird could scale those perpendicular marble walls.
That night, however, when the men crossed to the tramway, Moes met them with a wag of his tail.
He had crossed the river, and he had come back.
To the four reddish-brown, big-framed bloodhounds, I had given the names of Don, Teague, Jude, and Ranger,
and by the dinner persuasion, had succeeded in establishing some kind of family relation between them and Moes.
This night I tied up the bloodhounds after bathing and salving their sore feet, and I left Moes free,
for he grew fretful and surly under restraint.
The Mormon's prone dark blanket figures lay on the sand.
Jones was crawling into his bed.
I walked a little way from the dying fire and faced the north,
where the desert stretched mysterious and illumideral.
How Solomon still it was.
I drew in a great breath of the cold air
and thrilled with a nameless sensation.
Something was there, away to the northward.
It called me from out of the dark and gloom.
I was going to meet it.
I lay down to sleep with the great blue expanse open to my eyes.
The stars were very large and wonderfully bright,
yet they seemed so much further off than I had ever seen them.
The wind softly sifted to sand.
I hearkened to the tinkle of the cowbells on the hobbled horses.
The last thing I remembered was old Moes creeping close to my side,
seeking the warmth of my body.
When I awakened a long pale line,
showed out of the dun-colored clouds in the east.
It slowly lengthened and tinged to red.
Then the morning broke,
and the slopes of snow on the San Francisco peaks behind us
glowed a delicate pink.
The Mormons were up in doing with the dawn.
They were stalwart men, rather silent and all workers.
It was interesting to see them pack for the day's journey.
They traveled with wagons and mules in the most primitive way,
which Jones assured me was exactly as.
as their fathers had crossed the plains 50 years before,
on the trail to Utah.
All morning we made good time,
and as we descended into the desert,
the air became warmer.
The scrubby's cedar growth began to fail,
and the bunches of sage were few and far between.
I turned off and to gaze back at the San Francisco peaks.
The snow-capped tips glistened and grew higher,
and stood out in startling relief.
Someone said they could be seen two hundred miles across the desert,
and were landmark and a fascination to all travelers thitherward.
I never raised my eyes to the north that I did not draw my breath quickly
and grow chill with awe and bewilderment with the marvel of the desert.
The scaly red ground descended gradually, bare red knolls like waves,
rolled away northward, black beutes, roared their flat heads,
long ranges of sand flowed between them like streams,
and all sloped away to merge into gray, shadowy, obscured.
into wild and desolate, dreamy and misty nothingness.
Do you see those white sand dunes there?
More to the left, asked Emmett.
The little Colorado runs in there.
How far does it look to you?
Thirty miles, perhaps, I replied,
adding ten miles to my estimate.
It's seventy-five.
We'll get there day after...
Tomorrow.
If the snow in the mountains has begun to melt,
we'll have a time getting across.
That afternoon a hot wind
It blew in my face
Carrying a fine sand
That cut and blinded
It filled my throat
Sending me to the water-cask
Till I was ashamed
When I fell into my bed at night
I never turned
The next day was hotter
The wind blew harder
The sand stung sharper
About noon the following day
The horses whinnied
And the mules roused out of their tardy gate
They smell water
Said Emmett
And despite the heat and sand in my nostrils
I smelled it too
The dogs, poor, foot-sore fellows, twotted on the head down the trail.
A few more miles of hot sand and gravel and redstone brought us around a low messa to the little Colorado.
It was a wide stream of swiftly running reddish-muddly water.
In a channel cut by floods, little streams trickled and meandered in all directions.
The main part of the river ran in close to the bank we were on.
The dogs lolled in the water, the horses and mules tried to run in, but were restrained.
the men drank and bathed their faces.
According to my Flagstaff advisor,
this was one of the two drinks I would get on the desert.
So I veiled myself heartily of the opportunity.
The water was full of sand,
but cold and gratefully thirst quenching.
The little Colorado seemed no more to me than a shallow creek.
I heard nothing sullen or menacing in its musical floral.
Doesn't look bad, eh? Quarry Dimmett,
who read my thought,
you'd be surprised to learn how many men and Indians, horses, sheep, and wagons are buried under that quick sand.
The secret was out, and I wondered no more.
At once the stream and wet bars of sand took on a different color.
I removed my boots and waded out to a little bar.
The sand seemed quite firm, but water oozed out around my feet,
and when I stepped the whole bar shook like jelly.
I pushed my foot through the crust, and the cold wet sand took hold and tried to
Suck me down.
How can you ford this stream with horses, I ask, Emmett?
Well, he must take our chances, replied he.
We'll hitch two teams to one wagon and run the horses.
I forded here at worse stages than this.
Once a team got stuck and I had to leave it.
Another time, the water was high and washed me downstream.
Emmett sent his son into the stream on a mule.
The rider lashed his mouth and plunging, splashing,
crossed at a pace near a gallop.
He returned in the same manner
and reported one bad place near the other side.
Jones and I got on the first wagon
and tried to coax up the dogs,
but they would not come.
Emmett had to lash the four horses to start them,
and the other Mormons riding alongside yelled at them
and used their whips.
The wagons bowled into the water with a tremendous splash.
We were wet through before we had gone 20 feet.
The plunging horses were lost in yellow spray.
the stream rushed through the wheels.
The Mormon yelled.
I wanted to see but was lost in a veil of yellow mist.
Joan yelled in my ear, but I could not hear what he said.
Once the wagon wheel struck a stone or log,
almost lurching us overboard.
A muddy splash behind me.
I cried out in my excitement and punched Jones in the back.
Next moment, the keen acceleration of the ride gave way to horror.
We seemed to drag and almost stop.
Someone roared, horse down!
One instant of painful suspense in which imagination
and pictured another tragedy added to the record of this deceitful river.
A moment filled with intense feeling and sensation of splash and yell and fury of action,
then the three able horses dragged their comrade out of the quick sand.
He began his feet and plunged on.
Spurred by fear, the horses increased their efforts and amid clouds of spray galloped
the remaining distance to the other side.
Jones looked disgusted.
Like all plainsmen, he hated water.
Emmett and his men calmly unhitched.
no trace of alarm, or even of excitement showed in their bronzed faces.
We made it fine and easy, remarked Emmett.
So I sat down and wondered what Jones and Emmett and these men would consider really hazardous.
I began to have a feeling that I would find out.
That experience for me was but in its infancy, that far across the desert,
that something which had called me would show hard, keen, perilous life.
And I began to think of reserved powers of fortitude and indifference.
torrents. The other wagons were brought across without mishap, but the dogs did not come with him.
Jones called and called. The dogs howled and howled. Finally, I waited out over the wet bars,
they had little streams to a point several hundred yards nearer the dogs. Moes was lying down,
but the others were whining and howling in a state of great perturbation. I called and called.
They answered and even ran into the water, but did not start across. Hey, Moes! Hey, you ended!
I yelled, losing my patience.
You've already swam the big Colorado, and this is only a brook. Come on.
This appeal evidently touched Moes because he barked and plunged in.
He made the water fly, and when carried off his feet, breasted the current with energy and power.
He made shore almost even with me and wagged his tail.
Not to be outdone, Jude, Tigg, and Don followed suit,
and first one and then another was swept off his feet and carried downstream.
They landed below me.
This left Ranger, the pup, along.
Lorn on the other side, of all the pitiful yelps ever uttered by a frightened and lonely puppy,
his was the most forlorn I had ever heard.
Time after time he plunged in, and with many bitter howls of distress, went back.
I kept calling, and at last, hoping to make him come by a show of indifference, I started away.
This broke his heart.
Putting up his head, he let out a long, melancholy wail, which for aught I knew might have been a prayer,
and then consigned himself to the yellow current.
Rangers swam like a boy learning.
He seemed to be afraid to get wet.
His four feet were continually plowing the air in front of his nose.
When he struck the swift place, he went downstream like a flash.
But still kept swimming valiantly.
I tried to follow along the sandbar, but found it impossible.
I encouraged him by yelling.
He drifted far below, stranded on an island crossed it,
and plunged in again to make shore almost out of my sight.
And then at last I got to dry sand.
There was ranger wet and disheveled,
but consciously proud and happy.
After lunch, we entered upon the 70-mile stretch
from the little to the big Colorado.
Imagination had pictured the desert from me
as a vast sandy plain, flat and monotonous.
Reality showed me desolate mountains gleaming bare in the sun,
long lines of red bluffs, white sand dunes,
and hills of blue clay, areas of level ground,
In all, a many-hued, boundless world in itself, wonderful and beautiful, fading all around
in the purple haze of deceiving distance.
Thin, clear, sweet dry, the desert air carried a languor, a dreaminess, tidings of far-off
things, and an enthralling promise, the fragrance of flowers, the beauty and grace of women,
the sweetness of music, the mystery of life, all seemed to float on that promise.
It was the air breathed by the lotus-eaters when they dreamed and wandered no more.
Beyond Little Colorado, we began to climb again.
The sand was thick, the horses labored.
The drivers shielded their faces.
The dogs began to limp and lag.
Ranger had to be taken into a wagon,
and then one by one all of the other dogs except Moes,
he refused to ride and trotted along with his head down.
Far to the front, the pink cliffs, the ragged messes,
and the dark volcanic spurs of the big Colorado
stood up and beckoned us onward,
but they were a far hundred.
miles across the shifting sands and baked clay and ragged rocks. Always in the rear rose
the San Francisco peaks, cold and pure, dardingly clear and close in the rare atmosphere.
We camp near another waterhole, located in a deep yellow-colored gorge, crumbling to pieces a ruin of
rock and silent as the grave. In the bottom of the canyon was a pool of water, covered with
green scum. My thirst was effectively quenched by the mere sight of it.
I slept poorly and lay for hours watching the great stars.
The silence was painly oppressive.
If Jones had not begun to give a respectable imitation of the exhaust pipe on a steamboat,
I should have been compelled to shout aloud or get up,
but his snoring would have dispelled anything.
The morning came gray and cheerless.
I got up stiff and sore with a tongue like a rope.
All day long we ran the gauntlet of the hot flying sand.
Night came again a cold, windy night.
I slept well until a mule stepped on my bed,
which was conducive to restlessness.
At dawn, cold, gray clouds,
tried to blot out the rosy east.
I could hardly get up.
My lips were cracked, my tongue was swollen to twice its natural size.
My eyes smarted and burned.
The barrels and kegs of water were exhausted,
holes that had been dug in the dry sand of a dry stream bed.
The night before, in the morning, yielded
a scant supply of muddy alkali water, which went to the horses.
Only twice that day did I rouse to anything resembling enthusiasm.
We came to a stretch of country showing the wonderful diversity of the desert land,
a long range of beautifully rounded clay dunes bordered the trail.
So symmetrical were they that I imagined the work of sculptors,
light blue, dark blue, clay blue, marine, blue, cobalt blue,
every shade of blue was there, but no other color.
The other time that I awoke to sensations from without
was when we came to the top of a ridge.
We had been passing through redlands.
Jones called the place a strong, specific word,
which really was illustrative of the heat amid those scaling red ridges.
We came out where the red changed abruptly to gray.
I seemed always to see things first, and I cried out,
look, here are our red lake and trees.
No land, not only.
lake, said old Jim, smiling at me.
That's what haunts the desert traveler.
It's only a mirage.
So I awoke to the realization of that elusive thing, the mirage, a beautiful eye,
falsest stairs of sand.
Far northward, a clear rippling lake sparkled in the sunshine,
tall, stately trees with waving green foliage bordered on water.
For a long moment it lay there, smiling in the sun, a thing almost tangible.
and then it faded i felt a sense of actual loss so real had been the illusion that i could not believe i was not soon to drink and wade and dabble in the cool waters disappointment was keen
this is what maddens the prospect or sheepherder lost in the desert was it not a terrible thing to be dying of thirst to see sparkling water almost to smell it and then realized suddenly that all was only a lying trick of the
desert, a lure, a delusion. I ceased to wonder at the Mormons and their search for water,
their talk of water. But I had not realized its true significance. I had not known what water was.
I had never appreciated it. So it was my destiny to learn that water is the greatest thing on earth.
I hung over a three-foot hole in a dry stream bed and watched it ooze and seep through the sand
and fill up, oh, so slowly.
And I felt loose in my parched tongue
and steel through all my dry body
with strength and life.
Water is said to constitute three-fourths of the universe.
However that may be on the desert,
it is the whole world in all of life.
Two days passed by,
all hot sand and wind and glare.
The Mormon sang no more at evening.
Jones was silent.
The dogs were limp as rain.
At Mokopiwash, we ran into a sandstorm.
The horses turned their backs to it and bowed their heads patiently.
The Mormons covered themselves.
I wrapped a blanket round my head and hid behind a sagebrush.
The wind carrying the sand made a strange hollow roar.
All was enveloped in a weird, yellow, opaquecy.
The sand seeped through the sagebrush and swept by with a soft rustling sound, not unlike
the wind in the rye.
In time to time, I raised a corner of my blanket and peeped out.
Where my feet had stretched was an enormous mound of sand.
I felt the blanket weighted down, slowly settled over me.
Suddenly as it had come, the sandstorm passed.
It left a changed world for us.
The trail was covered.
The wheels hubbed deep in sand, the horses walking sand dunes.
I could not close my teeth without grating harshly on sand.
We journeyed onward and passed long lines of petrified trees,
some a hundred feet in length,
lying as they had fallen,
thousands of years before.
White ants crawled among the ruins.
Slowly climbing the sandy trail,
we circled a great red bluff,
with jagged peaks that had seemed
an interminable obstacle.
A scant growth of cedar and sage again
made its appearance.
Here we halted to pass another night.
Under a cedar I heard the plaintive,
piteous bleat of an animal.
I searched and presently found
a little black and white lamb.
scarcely able to stand.
It came readily to me.
I carried it to the wagon.
That's a Navajo lamb, said Emmett.
It's lost.
There are Navajo Indians close by.
Away in the desert we heard its cry,
quoted one of the Mormons.
Jones and I climbed the Red Messon near camp
to see the sunset.
All the western world was a blaze in golden glory.
Shaffes of light shot toward the zenith
and bands of paler gold,
tinging to rose circled away from the fiery sinking globe.
Suddenly the sun sank, the gold changed to gray, then to purple,
and shadows formed in a deep gorge at our feet.
So sudden was a transformation that soon it was night,
the solemn, impressive night of the desert,
a stillness that seemed too sacred to break, clasped the place.
It was infinite.
It held the bygone ages and eternity.
More days and miles, miles, miles.
The last day's ride to the Big Colorado was unforgettable.
We rode toward the head of a gigantic red cliff pocket,
a veritable inferno, immeasurably hot, glaring, awful.
It towered higher and higher above us.
When we reached a point of this red barrier,
we heard the dull, rumbling roar of water,
and we came out at length on a winding trail,
cut in the face of the bluff overhanging the Colorado River.
The first sight of most famous and much-heralded wonders of nature
is often disappointing.
But never can this be said of the blood-hued Rio Colorado.
If it had beauty, it was beauty that appalled.
So riveted was my gaze that I could hardly turn it across the river,
where Emmett proudly pointed out his lonely home,
an oasis set down amidst beetling red cliffs.
How grateful to the eye was the green of alfalfa and cottonwood.
Going round the bluff trail, the wheels had only a foot of room to spare,
and the sheer descent into the red turbid congested river was terrifying.
I saw the constricted rapids where the Colorado took its plunge
into the box-like head of the Grand Canyon of Arizona,
and the deep reverberating boom of the river at flood height was a fearful thing to hear.
I could not repress a shudder at the thought of crossing above that rapid.
The bronze walls widened as we proceeded,
and we got down presently to a level where a long wire cable stretched across the river.
Under the cable ran a rope.
On the other side was an old scow mored to the bank.
Are we going across in that?
I asked Emmett pointing to the river.
the boat. We'll all be on the other side before dark, he replied cheerily. I felt that I would
rather start back alone over the desert than trust myself in such a craft on such a river.
And it was all because I had experience with bad rivers, and I thought I was a judge of
dangerous currents. The Colorado slid with a menacing roar out of a giant split in the red
wall, whirled, eddied, bulged on toward its confinement in the iron-ribbed canyon below.
In answer to shots fired, Emmett's man appeared on the other side and rode down to the
ferry landing. He got into a skiff and rode laboriously upstream for a long distance before
he started across and then swung into the current. He swept down rapidly and twice the skiff
whirled and completely turned round. After he reached our bank safely, taking two men aboard,
he rode upstream again, close to the shore,
and returned to the opposite side in much the same manner
in which he had come over.
The three men pushed out to scow and,
grasping the rope overhead, began to pull.
The big craft ran easily.
When the current struck it, the wire cable sagged,
the water boiled and surged under it,
rising one end and then the other.
Nevertheless, five minutes were all that were required
to pull the boat over.
It was a rude oblong affair,
made of heavy planks loosely put together
and it leaked. When Jones suggested that we get the agony over as quickly as possible,
I was with him, and we embarked together. Jones said he did not like the look of the tackle,
and when I thought of his, by no means small mechanical skill, I had not, added a cheerful
idea to my consciousness. The horses of the first team had to be dragged upon the scow,
and once on, they reared and plunged. When we started, four men pulled the rope,
and Emmett sat in the stern with the tackle guise in hand.
As the current hit us, he led out the guys
which maneuver caused the boat to swing stern downstream.
When it pointed obliquely, he made fast the guise again.
I saw that this served two purposes.
The current struck, slid alongside, and over the stern,
which mitigated the danger and, at the same time, help the boat across.
To look at the river was to court terror,
but I had to look.
It was an infernal thing.
It roared in hollow, sullen voice as a monster growling.
It had a voice this river, and one strangely changeful.
It moaned as if in pain, it whined, it cried.
And at times it would seem strangely silent.
The current was as complex and as mutable as human life.
It boiled, beat, and bulged.
The bulge itself was an incomprehensible thing,
like a roaring lift of the waters from a submarine explosion.
Then it would smooth out and run like oil.
It shifted from one channel to another,
rushed to the center of the river,
then swung close to one shore or the other.
Again, it swelled near the boat in great, boiling, hissing eddies.
Look, see where it breaks through the mountain, yelled Jones in my ear?
I looked upstream to see the stupendous granite walls
separated in a gigantic split
that must have been made by a terrible seismic disturbance,
and from this gap poured the dark, turgid, mystic flood.
I was in a cold sweat when we touched shore,
and I jumped long before the boat was properly moored.
Emmett was wet to the waist,
where the water had surged over him.
As he sat rearranging some tackle,
a remarked to him that, of course, he must be a splendid swimmer,
or he would not take such risk.
No, I can't swim a stroke.
replied, and it wouldn't be of any use if I could.
Once in there a man's a goner.
You've had accidents here, I question.
No, not bad.
We only drowned two men last year.
You see, we had to tow the boat up the river and row across,
and then we hadn't the wire.
Just above, on the other side the boat hit a stone,
and current washed over, taking off the team and two men.
Didn't you attempt to rescue them, I asked, after waiting a moment?
No use.
They never came up.
Hitting the river high now,
I continue shuddering as I glanced out at the whirling logs and drifts.
I am coming up.
If I don't get the other teams over today,
I'll wait until she goes down.
At this season she rises and lowers every day or so until June.
Then comes the big flood.
And we don't cross for months.
I sat for three hours watching Emmett bring over the rest of his party,
which he did without accident,
but at the expense of great effort,
and all the time in my ears
din the roar, the boom,
the rumble of this singularly
rapacious and purposeful river,
a river of silt,
a red river of dark,
sinister meaning,
a river with terrible work to perform,
a river which never gave up its dead.
End of chapter one.
Chapter two of the last plainsman.
This is a Libra Fox recording. All Libra Fox recordings are in the public domain.
Recording by Mike Vendetti. The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray.
Chapter 2. The Range
After a much-needed rest at Emmett's, we bade goodbye to him and his hospitable family,
and under the guidance of his men, once more, took to the windswept trail.
We pursued a southwesterly course now, following the lead of the Craigie Redwall,
that stretched on and on for hundreds of miles into Utah.
The desert, smoky and hot, fell away to the left
and in the foreground of dark, irregular line marked the Grand Canyon,
cutting through the plateau.
The wind whipped in from the vast open expanse
and meeting an obstacle on the red wall, turned north and raced past us.
Jones's hat blew off, stood on its rim, and rolled.
It kept on rolling, 30 miles an hour, more or less,
so fast at least that we were a long-time catching,
up to it with a team of horses.
Possibly, we never would have caught it,
had not a stone, checked his flight.
Further manifestation of the power of the desert wind
surrounded us on all sides.
It had hollowed out huge stones from the cliffs
and tumbled them to the plain below,
and then sweeping sand and gravel
low across the desert floor,
had cut them deeply,
until they rested on slender pedestals,
thus sculpturing grotesque and striking monuments,
to the marvelous persist
of this element of nature.
Late that afternoon we reached the height of the plateau.
Jones woke up and shouted,
Ah, there's Buckskin.
Far southward lay a long black mountain,
covered with patches of shining snow.
I could follow the zigzag line of the Grand Canyon,
splitting the desert plateau,
and saw it disappear in the haze round the end of the mountain.
From this I got my first clear impression
of the topography of the country
surrounding our objective point.
Buckskin Mountain,
ran its blunt end eastward to the canyon,
in fact, formed 100 miles of the north rim.
As it was 9,000 feet high,
it still held the snow,
which had occasioned our lengthy desert ride
to get back of the mountain.
I could see the long slopes rising out of the desert
to meet the timber.
As with bold, merely downgrade,
I noticed that we were no longer on stony ground
and that a little scant silvery grass
had made its appearance.
Then little branches of green
with the blue flower smiled out of the clay sand.
All of a sudden, Jones stood up and let out a wild,
Comanche Yell.
I was more startled by the yell than by the great hand
he smashed down on my shoulder,
and for the moment I was dazed.
There, look, look, the buffalo, hey, hi, hi, hi,
below us a few miles on a rising knoll,
a big herd of buffalo shone black in the gold of the evening sun.
I had not Jones's in sand,
but I felt enthusiasm born of the wild and beautiful picture and added my yell to his.
The huge, burly leader of the herd lifted his head,
and after regarding us for a few moments calmly went on browsing.
The desert had fringed away into a grand rolling pasture land,
walled in by the red cliffs, the slopes of buckskin and further isolated by the canyon.
Here was a range of 2,400 square miles without a foot of barbed wire,
a pasture fenced in by natural forces,
with the splendid feature that the buffalo could browse on the plane in winter
and go up into the cool foothills of buckskin in summer.
From another ridge we saw a cabin dotting the rolling plain,
and in half an hour we reached it.
As we climbed down from the wagon, a brown and black dog came dashing out of the cabin
and promptly jumped at Moes.
This selection showed poor discrimination for Moes whipped him before I could separate them.
Hearing Jones hardly greeting someone, I turned in his direction, only to be distracted by
another dogfight.
Don had tackled Mose for the seventh time.
Memory rankled in Don and needed a lot of whipping, some of which he was getting when I rescued
him.
Next moment I was shaking hands with Frank and Jim, Jones's ranchman.
At a glance I liked them both.
Frank was short and wiry, and had a big ferocious mustache, the effect of which was softened
by his kindly brown eyes.
Jim was tall, a little heavier.
He had a careless, tidy look.
His eyes were searching,
and, though he appeared a young man,
his hair was white.
I sure am glad to see you all,
said Jim in a slow, soft, southern accent.
Get down, get down,
was Frank's welcome, a typically western one,
for we had hardly gotten down,
and come in, you must be worked out.
Sure, you've come a long way.
He was quick of speech, full of nervous energy, and beamed with hospitality.
The cabin was the rudest kind of log affair, with a huge stone fireplace in one end,
deer antlers and coyoteskins on the wall, saddles and cowboys traps in the corner,
a nice large promising cupboard, and a cable in chairs.
Jim threw wood on a smoldering fire that soon blazed and crackled cheerily.
I sank down into a chair with a feeling of blessed relief.
ten days of desert right behind me promise of wonderful days before me with the last of the old plainsman no wonder a sweet sense of ease stole over me or that the fire seemed alive and joyously welcoming thing
or that jim's deft maneuvers in preparation of supper aroused in me a rapt admiration twenty calves is spring cried jones punching me and i sore side ten thousand dollars worth of calves
He was now altogether a changed man.
He looked almost young.
His eyes danced, and he rubbed his big hands together
while he plied Frank with questions.
In strange surroundings, that is, away from his native wilds,
Jones had been a silent man.
It had been almost impossible to get anything out of him.
But now I saw that I should come to know the real man.
In a very few moments he had talked more than on all the desert trip,
and what he had said added to the little,
I had already learned, put me in possession of some interesting information as to his buffalo.
Some years before, he had conceived the idea of hybridizing buffalo with black Galloway cattle,
and with the characteristic determination and energy of the man, he had once set about
finding a suitable range. This was difficult, and took years of searching. At last, the
wild north rim of the Grand Canyon, a section unknown, except to a few Indians and Mustang
hunters, was settled upon.
Then the gigantic task of transporting the herd of buffalo by rail from Montana to Salt Lake was begun.
The 290 miles of desert lying between the home of the Mormons and the Buckskin Mountain was an obstacle almost insurmountable.
The journey was undertaken and found even more trying than had been expected.
Buffalo after Buffalo died on the way.
Then Frank Jones's right-hand man put into execution a plan he had been thinking of, namely to travel by night.
It succeeded.
The buffalo rested in the day and traveled by easy stages by night,
which the result, that the big herd was transported to the ideal range.
Here, in an environment strange to the race, but particularly adaptable,
they thrived and multiplied.
The hybrid of the Galloway cow and buffalo proved a great success.
Jones called the new species Cattleau.
The Cattleau took the heartiness of the buffalo
and never required artificial food or shelter.
He would face the desert storm or blizzard
and stand stock still in his tracks
until the weather cleared.
He became quite domestic,
could be easily handled,
and grew exceedingly fat on very little provender.
The folds of his stomach were so numerous
that they digested even the hardest and flintiest of corn.
He had 14 ribs on each side,
while domestic cattle had only 13,
thus he could endure,
rougher work and longer journeys to water.
His fur was so dense and glossy
that it equaled that of the unplucked beaver or otter,
and was fully as valuable as the buffalo robe,
and not to be overlooked by any means
was the fact that his meat was delicious.
Jones had to hear every detail of all that had happened
since his absence in the east,
and he was particularly inquisitive
to learn all about the 20 cattle cows.
He called different buffalo by name,
and designated the calves by descriptive terms such as white face and cross-patch.
He almost forgot to eat, and kept Frank too busy to get anything into his own mouth.
After supper, he calmed down.
How about your other man, Mr. Wallace? I think you said, ask Frank.
We expected to meet him at Grand Canyon Station, and then at Flagstaff.
But he didn't show up. Either he backed out or missed us.
I'm sorry, for when we get up on buckskin among the wild horses and cougars,
we'll be likely to need him.
I'll reckon you'll need me as well as Jim,
said Frank Driley, with a twinkle in his eye.
The buffs are in good shape
and can get along without me for a while.
That'll be fine.
How about Cougar sign on the mountain?
Plenty.
We got two spotted coming over near Oak Spring two weeks ago.
I tracked them in the snow along the trail for miles.
We'll ease over that way as it's going towards the seawash.
The seawash breaks of the canyon.
There's the place for lions.
I met a wild horse rangler not long back,
and he was telling me about old Tom and the colts he'd killed this winter.
Naturally, I expressed here a desire to know more of old Tom.
He's the biggest cougar ever known in these parts.
His tracks are bigger than horses and have been seen on buckskin for 12 years.
This rangler, his name is Chuck.
said he turned his saddle horse out to graze near camp and old tom sneaked in and downed him lions over there are sure a bold bunch well why shouldn't they be no one ever hunted them you see the mountain is hard to get at but now you're here and big cats you want we sure can find them
only be easy be easy you've all the time there is and any job on buckskin will take time we'll look at the cabs over and
You must ride the range to harden up.
Then we'll ooze over towards oak.
I expect it'll be boggy, and I hope the snow melts soon.
The snow hadn't melted on Greenland Point, replied Jones.
We saw that with a glass from the El Tovar.
We wanted to cross that way, but Rust said Bright Angel Creek was breast-high to a horse,
and that creek is the trail.
There's four feet of snow on Greenland, said Frank.
It was too early to come that way.
There is only about three months in the year the canyon can be crossed at Greenland.
I want to get in the snow, returned Jones.
This bunch of long-eared canines are brought never smelled the lion track.
Hounds can't be trained quick without snow.
You've got to see what they're trailing, or you can't break them.
Frank looked dubious.
Pears to me we'll have trouble getting a lion without lion dogs.
It takes a long time to break a hound off a deer, once he's chased him.
Buckskin is full of deer, wolves, coyotes, and there's the wild horses.
We couldn't go a hundred feet without crossing trails.
How's the hound you and Jim fetched in last year?
Has he got a good nose?
Here he is.
I like his head.
Come here, Bowser.
What's his name?
Jim named him Sounder, because he sure has a voice.
It's great to hear him on the trail.
Sounder has a nose that can't be fooled, and he'll trail anything.
but I don't know if he ever got up on a lion.
Sounder wagged his bushy-tailed and looked up affectionately at Frank.
He had a fine head, great brown eyes, very long ears, and curly brownish-black hair.
He was not demonstrative, looked rather askinsed Jones, and avoided the other dogs.
A dog will make a great lion-chaser, said Jones decisively, after his study of Sounder.
He and Mose will keep us busy once they learn we want lions.
"'I don't believe any dog-trainer could teach them short of six months,' replied Frank.
"'Sounder's no spring chicken, and that black and dirty white cross between a coyose and a barbed wire fence
"'is an old dog. You can't teach old dog's new tricks.'
Jones smiled mysteriously, a smile of conscious superiority, but said nothing.
"'Well, sure have a storm noir,' said Jim, relinquishing his pipe long enough to speak.
He had been silent and now his meditative gaze was on the west, through the cabin window,
where a dull afterglow faded after the heavy laden clouds of night, and left the horizon dark.
I was very tired when I lay down, but so full of excitement that sleep did not soon visit my eyelids.
The talk about buffalo, wild horse hunters, lions and dogs,
the prospect of hard riding and unusual adventure, the vision of old Tom,
that had already begun to haunt me, filled my mind with pictures and fancies.
The other fellows dropped off to sleep and quiet rained.
Suddenly a succession of queer sharp barks came from the plain, close to the cabin.
Coyotes were paying us a call, and judging from the chorus of yelps and howls from our dogs,
it was not a welcome visit.
Above the medley rose a big, deep, full voice that I knew at once belonged to sounder.
Then all was quiet again, slid.
Sleep, gradually benumbed my senses.
Vague phrases.
Fremely drifted to and fro in my mind.
Jones Wild Range, Old Tom, Sounder,
great name, great voice, sounder, sounder, sound...
Next morning I could hardly crawl out of my sleeping bay.
My bones ached.
My muscles protested excruciatingly.
My lips burned and bled, and the cold I had contracted on the desert,
clung to me.
A good brisk walk around the corrals and then brinked,
breakfast made me feel better. Of course you can ride, queried Frank. My answer was not given from
an overwhelming desire to be truthful. Frank frowned a little as if wondering how a man could have
the nerve to start out on a jaunt with Buffalo Jones without being a good horseman. To be unable
to stick on the back of a wild Mustang or a cayuse was an unpartable sin in Arizona. My frank
admission was made relatively with my mind on what cowboys held as a standard
of horsemanship. The Mount Frank trotted out from the corral for me was a pure white, beautiful
Mustang, nervous, sensitive quivering. I watched Frank put on the saddle, and when he called me,
I did not fail to catch a covert twinkle in his merry brown eyes. Looking away toward
Buckskin Mountain, which was coincidentally in the direction of home, I said to myself,
This may be where you get on, but most certainly it is where you get off.
Jones was already riding far beyond the corral, as I could see by a cloud of dust,
and I set off after him with the painful consciousness that I must have looked to Frank and Jim.
Much as Central Park equestrians had often looked to me.
Frank shouted after me that he would catch up with us out on the range.
I was not in any great hurry to overtake Jones,
but evidently my horse's inclinations differed from mine.
At any rate, he made the dust fly and jumped the little sagebrushes.
Jones, who had tarried to inspect one of the pools,
formed of running water from the corrals,
greeted me as I came up with this cheerful observation.
What in thunder! Did Frank give you that white nag for?
Buffalo hate white horses, anything white.
They're liable to stand,
"'to stampede off the range or chase you into the canyon.'
"'I replied grimly that, as it was certain something was going to happen,
"'the particular circumstance might as well come off quickly.
"'We rode over the rolling plain with the cool, racing breeze in our faces.
"'The sky was dull and mottled,
"'with a beautiful cloud effect that pre-staged wind.
"'As we trotted along, Jones pointed out to me and discandered upon the nutritive value
"'of three different kinds of grass,
one of which he called the buffalo pea,
noteworthy for a beautiful blue blossom.
Soon we passed out of sight of the cabin
and could see only the billowy plain,
the red dips of the stony wall,
and the black fringe crest of buckskin.
After riding a while,
we met out some cattle,
a few of which were on the range browsing
in the lee of a ridge.
No sooner had I marked them
than Jones let out another Comanche yell.
Wolf! he yelled,
and spurring his big bay,
he was off like the wind. A single glance showed me several cows running, as if bewildered,
and near them a big white wolf pulled down a cap. Another white wolf stood not far off. My horse
jumped, as if he had been shot, and the realization darted upon me that here was where
the certain something began. Spot the Mustang had one black spot on his pure white.
Snorted like I imagined a blooded horse might, under dire insult. Jones's bay had gotten about
a hundred paces the start. I lived to learn that Spot hated to be left behind. Moreover, he would
not be left behind. He was the swiftest horse on the range, and proud of the distinction.
I cast one unmentionable word on the breeze toward the cabin and Frank, then put mind and muscle
to the sore task of remaining with Spot. Jones was born on a saddle, and had been taking
his meals in a saddle for about 63 years, and the bay horse could run. Run is not a felicit
word he flew and i was rendered mentally deranged for the moment to see that hundred paces between the bay and spot materially lessen at every jump spot lengthened out seemed to go down nearer the ground and cut the air like a highs geared auto
if i had not heard the fast rhythmic beat of his hoofs and not bounced high into the air at every jump i would have been sure i was riding a bird i tried to stop him as well might i have trying to pull in the lestinia with a thread
Spot was out to overhaul the bay, and in spite of me, he was doing it.
The wind rushed into my face and sang in my ears.
Jones seemed the nucleus of a sort of haze, and he grew larger and larger.
Presently he became clearly defined in my sight.
The violent commotion under me subsided.
I once more felt the saddle,
and then I realized that Spot had been content to stop alongside the Jones,
tossing his head and chopping at his bit.
Well, by George, I didn't know you,
You were in the stretch, cried my companion.
That was a fine little brush.
We must have come several miles.
I'd have killed those wolves if I had a gun.
The big one that had the calf was a bold brute.
He never let go until I was within fifty feet of him.
Then I almost rode him down.
I don't think the calf was much hurt.
But those bloodthirsty devils will return, and like as not get the calf.
That's the worst of cattle raising.
Now take the buffalo.
Do you suppose those wolves could have gotten a buffalo cap out from under the mother?
Never. Neither could a whole band of wolves. Buffaloes stick close together, and the little ones do not stray.
When danger threatens the herd closes in and faces it and fights. That is what is grand about the buffalo
and what made them once roam the prairies in countless, endless droves.
From the highest elevation in that part of the range,
we viewed the surrounding ridges, flats and hollows, searching for the buffalo.
At length we spied a cloud of dust rising from behind an undulating mound,
then big black dots hove in sight.
Frank has rounded up the herd and is driving it this way, we'll wait, said Jones.
Little buffalo appeared to be moving fast, a long time elapsed before they reached the foot of our outlook.
They lumbered along in a compact mass so dense that I could not count them,
but I estimated the number to be at 75.
Frank was riding zigzag behind him, swinging his lariat and yelling.
When he espied us, he reined in his horse and waited.
Then the hurt slowed down, halted, and began browsing.
Look at the Cadillow Cabs.
See how shy they are?
How close they stick to their mothers?
Little brown fellows were plainly frightened.
I made several unsuccessful at times.
attempts to photograph them and gave up when Jones told me not to ride too close and that it would be better to wait till we had them in the corral.
He took my camera and instructed me to go on ahead, in the rear of the herd.
I heard the click of the instrument as he snapped a picture, and then suddenly heard him shout in alarm.
Look out, look out. Pull your horse.
Thundering hoofbeats, pounding the earth accompanied his word.
I saw a big bull with his head down, tail-raised, charging my horse.
He answered Frank's yell of command with a furious grunt.
I was paralyzed at the wonderfully swift action of the shaggy brute,
and I sat helpless.
Spot wheeled as if he were on a pivot
and plunged out of the way with a celerity that was astounding.
The buffalo stopped, pawed the ground,
and angrily tossed his huge head.
Frank rode up to him, yelled, and struck him with the lariat.
Whereupon he gave another toss of his horns,
and then returned to the herd.
It was that darned white nag.
said Jones, Frank, it was wrong to put an inexperienced man on Spot.
For that matter, the horse should never be allowed to go near Buffalo.
Spot knows the buffs, they'd never get to him, replied Frank,
but the usual spirit was absent from his voice,
and he glanced at me soberly.
I knew I had turned white, for I felt the peculiar cold sensation in my face.
Now look at that, will you? cried Jones.
I don't like the looks of that.
He pointed to the herd they stopped browsing and were uneasily shifting to and fro.
The bull lifted his head.
The other slowly grouped together.
Storm, sandstorm, exclaimed Jones, pointing desertward.
Dark yellow clouds like smoke were rolling, sweeping, bearing down upon us.
They expanded, blossoming out like gigantic roses,
and whirled and merged into one another,
all the time rolling on and blotting out the light.
We've got to run.
That storm may last two days, yelled Frank to me.
We've had some bad ones lately.
Give your horse free rain and cover your face.
A roar resembling and approaching storm at sea came on puffs of wind.
As the horses got onto their stride, long streaks of dust whipped up in different places.
The silver white grass bent to the ground.
Round bunches of sage went rolling before us.
The puffs grew longer, steady, or harder.
Then a shrieking blast howled on the art trail, seeming to swoop.
down on us with a yellow blinding pall. I shut my eyes and covered my face with a handkerchief.
The sand blew so thick that it filled my gloves. Pebble struck me hard enough to sting through
my coat. Fortunately, Spot kept to an easy swinging lobe, which was the most comfortable
motion for me, but I began to get numb and could hardly stick on the saddle. Almost before
I had dared to hope Spot stopped. Uncovering my face, I saw Jim in the doorway of the
side of the cabin. The yellow, streaky, whistling clouds of sand split on the cabin and passed
on, leaving a small dusty space of light. Sure spot do hate to be beat, yelled Jim, as he helped me off.
I stumbled into the cabin and fell upon a buffalo robe and lay there absolutely spent. Jones and
Frank came in a few minutes apart, each anthemsizing the gritty, powdery sand. All day the desert storm
raged and roared. The dust sifted through the numerous cracks in the cabin.
Bird in our clothes, spoiled our food, and blinded our eyes.
Wind, snow, sleet, and rainstorms are discomforting enough under trying circumstances,
but all combined, they are nothing to the choking, stinging, blinding, sandstorm.
Short let up by sundown of your gym. And sure enough, the roar died away about five o'clock.
The wind abated and the sand settled. Just before supper and knock sounded heavily on
the cabin door. Jim opened it to admit one of Emmett's son and a very tall man whom none of us knew.
He was a sandman. All that was not sand seemed a space or two of Corderoy, a big bone-handled knife,
a prominent square jaw and bronze cheek and flashing eyes. Get down, get down. Come on in,
stranger, said Frank cordially. How do you do, sir? said Jones. Colonel Jones, I've been on your
trail for twelve days, announced the stranger with a grim smile. The sand streamed off his
coat in little white streaks, Jones appeared to be casting about in his mind.
I'm Grant Wallace, continued the newcomer.
I missed you at El Tower at Williams and at Flagstaff, where I was one day behind.
Was half a day late at the little Colorado, saw your train across Montcabay Wash,
and missed you because of the sandstorm there.
Saw you from the other side of the big Colorado, as you rode out from Emmett's along the
red wall.
And here I am.
We've never met till night.
which obviously is my fault.
The Colonel and I fell upon Wallace's neck.
Frank manifested his usual alert excitation and said,
Well, I guess he won't hang fire on a long cougar chase.
And Jim slow, careful Jim, dropped a plate with the exclamation.
Sure it do beat hell.
The hound sniffed around Wallace and welcomed him with vigorous tails.
Supper that night, even if we did grind sand with our teeth,
was a joyous occasion.
The biscuits were flaky and light,
the bacon fragrant and crisp.
I produced a jar of blackberry jam
which, by subtle cunning,
I had been able to secrete from the Mormons
on the dry desert ride,
and it was greeted with acclamations of pleasure.
While I was divested of his sand guys,
beamed with a gratification of a hungry man,
once more in the presence of friends and food.
He made large cavities in Jim's great pot of potato,
potato stew, and caused biscuits to vanish in a way that would not have shamed, a Hindu magician.
The Grand Canyon he dug in my jar of jam, however, could not have been accomplished by
a ledger domain.
Talk became animated on dogs, cougars, horses, and buffalo.
Jones told of our experience out on the range and concluded with some salient remarks,
a tame wild animal is the most dangerous of beast.
My old friend Dick Rock, a great hunter and guide out of my old friend, Dick Rock, a great hunter and guide
out of Idaho, laughed at my advice and got killed by one of his three-year-old bulls. I told him they
knew him just well enough to kill him, and he did. My friend H. Cole of Oxford, Nebraska,
tried to rope a wheataw that was too tame to be safe. And the bull killed him. Same with General
Bull, a member of the Kansas legislature and two cowboys who went into a corral to tie up a tame elk
at the wrong time. I pleaded with him not to do that.
to undertake it. They had not studied animals as I had. That tame elk, killed all of them.
He had to be shot in order to get General Bull off his great antlers. You see, a wild animal must
learn to respect a man. The way I used to teach the Yellowstone Park Bears to be respectable
and safe neighbors was to rope them around the front paw, swing them up on a tree clear of the
ground and whip them with a long pole. It was a dangerous business and looks cruel, but it is the only
way I could find to make the bears good. You see they eat scraps around the hotels and get so tame
they will steal everything but red-hot stoves and will cuff the life out of those who try to
shoe them off. But after a bear mother has had a licking, she not only becomes a good bear for the
rest of her life, but she tells all her cubs about it with a good smack of her paw for emphasis
and teaches them to respect peaceable citizens, generation after generations.
One of the hardest jobs I ever tackled was that of supplying the buffalo for Bronx Park.
I rounded up a magnificent king buffalo bull belligerent enough to fight a battleship.
When I wrote after him, the common said I was as good as killed.
I made a lance by driving a nail into the end of a short.
or pole and sharpening it. After he had chased me, I wheeled my bronco and hurled the lance into his back,
ripping a wound as long as my hand. That put the fear of providence into him and took the fight
all out of him. I drove him uphill and down and across canyons at a dead run for eight miles,
single-handed, loaded him on a freight car, but he came near getting me once or twice,
and only quick bronco work and Lance play, save me.
In the Yellowstone Park, all our buffaloes have become docile,
accepting the huge bull which led them.
The Indians call the buffalo leader the Weta, the master of the herd.
It was sure death to go near this one,
so I shipped in another Wita, hoping that he might whip some of the fight out of the old Manitou,
the mighty.
They came together head on, like a railway collision,
and ripped up over a square mile.
wild landscape, fighting till night came on and then on into the night.
I jumped into the field with them, chasing them with my biograph,
getting a series of moving pictures of the bullfight, which was sure a real thing.
It was a ticklish thing to do, though, knowing that neither bull dared take his eyes off
his adversary for a second.
Felt reasonably safe.
The old Weetaw beat the new champion out that night, but the next morning they were
at it again, and the new buffalo finally whipped the,
the old one into submission.
Since then, his spirit has remained broken,
and even a child can approach him safely.
But the new we ta is in turn a holy terror.
To handle buffalo elk and bear,
you must get into sympathy with their methods of reasoning.
No tenderfoot stands in each show,
even with the tame animals of the Yellowstone.
The old buffalo hunter's lips were no longer locked.
One after another, he told reminiscence of his,
eventful life, in a simple manner yet so vivid and gripping, were the unvarnished details that
I was spellbound. Considering what appears the impossibility of capturing a full-grown buffalo,
how did you earn the name of Preserver of the American Bison, inquired Wallace?
It took years to learn how, and ten more to capture the 58th that I was able to keep.
I tried every plan under the sun. I roped hundreds of all sizes and ages. They would not live
in captivity. If they could not find an embankment over which to break their necks, they would
crush their skulls on stones. Failing any means like that, they would lie down, will themselves
to die and die. Think of a savage wild nature that could wheel its heart to cease beating,
but it's true. Finally I have found that I could keep only calves under three months of age,
but to capture them so young entailed time and patience, for the buffalo fight for their young,
and when I say fight I mean they until they drop.
I almost always had to go alone
because I could neither coax nor hire anyone to undertake it with me.
Sometimes I would be weeks on getting one cab.
One day I captured eight, eight little buffalo calves.
Never will I forget that day as long as I live.
Tell us about it, I suggested, in a matter of fact, round the campfire voice.
Had the silent plainsman ever told,
told a complete and full story of his adventures, I doubted it.
He was not the man to eulogize himself.
A short silence ensued.
The cabin was snug and warm.
The rudy embers glowed.
One of Jim's pots steamed musically and fragrantly.
The hounds lay curled in a cozy chimney corner.
Jones began to talk again, simply and unaffectedly, of his famous exploit.
And as he went on so modestly passing light
over features we recognized as wonderful.
I allowed the fire of my imagination to fuse for myself.
All the toil, patience, endurance, skill,
Herculean strength, and marvelous courage,
and unfathomable passion,
which he slighted in his narrative.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of The Last Plainsman.
This is a Libra Fox recording.
All Libra Fox recordings are in the public domain.
Recording by Mike Vendetti.
The Last Plainsman.
by Zane Gray. Chapter 3, The Last Heard.
Over gray no man's land stole down the shadows of night. The undulating prairie shaded dark to the
western horizon rimmed with a fading streak of light, tall figures, silhouetted sharply against
the last golden glow of sunset, marked the rounded crest of a glassy knoll.
Wild Hunter, cried a voice in sullen rage. Buffalo or no, we halt here. Did Adams and I hire
to cross the staked plains.
Two weeks in no man's land,
and now we're facing the sand.
We've one keg of water yet
you want to keep on.
Why, man, you're crazy.
You didn't tell us you wanted Buffalo alive.
And here you've got us looking,
death in the eye.
In the grim silence that ensued
to two men unhitched the team
from the long light wagon,
while the Buffalo hunter
staked out his wiry,
lithe-limbed racehorses.
Soon a fluttering blaze
through a circle of light
which shone on the agitated face of
rude and atoms,
and the cold iron-set visage of their brawny leader.
It's this way,
began Jones in slow, cool voice.
I engaged you, fellows,
and you promised to stick by me.
We've had no luck.
But I've finally found sign,
old sign I'll admit,
of the buffalo I'm looking for,
the last herd on the plains.
For two years I've been hunting this herd.
So have other hunters.
Millions of buffalo have been killed and left the rot.
Soon this herd will be gone.
And then the only buffalo in the world will be those I have given ten years of the hardest
work in capturing.
This is the last herd, I say, and my last chance to capture a calf or two.
Do you imagine I'd quit?
You fellas go back if you want.
But I keep on.
We can't go back.
We're lost.
We'll have to go with you.
But, man, thirst is not the only risk.
run, this is Comanche country. And if that herd is in here, the Indians have it spotted.
That worries me some, replied the plainsman, but we'll keep on. They slept. The night wind
swished the grasses, dark storm clouds blotted out the northern stars, the prairie wolves mourned
dismally. Day broke cold, wah, threatening. Under a leaden sky, the hunters traveled 30 miles
by noon, and halted in a hollow where a stream flowed in wet season. Cottonwood trees,
were bursting into green, thickets of prickly thorn, dense and matted, showed bright spring buds.
What is it? Suddenly whispered, rude. The plainsman lay in strained posture, his ear against the ground.
Hide the wagon and horses in that clump of cottonwoods, he ordered tersely. Springing to his feet,
he ran to the top of the knoll above the hollow, where he again placed his ear to the ground.
Jones's practiced ear had detected the quavering rumble of far-way thundering hoaves.
He searched the wide waist of plain with his powerful glass.
To the southwest miles distant a cloud of dust mushroom skyward.
Not buffalo, he muttered.
Maybe wild horses.
He watched and waited.
The all cloud ruled forward, enlarging, spreading out,
and drove before it a darkly indistinct moving mass.
As soon as he had one good look at this, he ran back to his comrades.
Stampede, wild horses, Indians, look to your rifles and hide.
wordless and pale, the men examined their sharps and made ready to follow Jones.
He slipped into the thorny break and flat on his stomach,
wormed his way like a snake far into the thickly interlaced web of branches.
Ruden Adams crawled after him.
Words were superfluous.
Quiet, breathless, with beating hearts,
the hunters pressed close to the dry grass.
A long, low, steady rumble filled the air,
and increased in volume till it became a roar.
Moments, endless moments passed.
The roar filled out like a flood, slowly released from its confines to sweep down with the sound of doom.
The ground began to tremble and quake.
The light faded.
The smell of dust pervaded the thicket, then a continuous streaming roar,
deafening as a persistent roar of thunder pervaded the hiding place.
The stampeding horses had split around the hollow.
The roar lessened, swiftly as a departing snow-squall,
rushing on through the pines, the thunder's thud and trance.
of hooves died away.
The trained horses hidden in the cottonwoods never stirred.
Lie low, lie low, breathed the plainsman to his companions.
Throb of hoofs again became soddable, not loud and madly pounding as those that had
passed, but low muffled rhythmic.
Jones's sharp eye threw a peep-hole in the thicket, saw a cream-colored Mustang bob
over the knoll, carrying an Indian, another and another, then a swiftly following, close-packed
throng appeared. Bright red feathers and white gleamed. Weapons glinted, got bronze savages
leaned forward on racy, slender mustangs. The plainsman shrank closer to the ground. Apache,
he exclaimed to himself and gripped his rifle. The band galloped down through the hollow,
and slowing up, piled single file over the bank. The leader, a short squat chief,
plunged into the brake not twenty yards from the hidden men. Jones recognized the cream
Mustang into the somber, sinister, broad face. It belied.
along to the red chief of the Apaches.
Geronimo,
remembered the plainsman through his teeth.
Well, for the Apache,
that no falcon savage eye discovered
aught strange in that little hollow.
One look at the sand of the stream bed
would have cost him his life.
But the Indians crossed the thicket, too far up.
They cantered up the slope and disappeared.
The hoofbeat softened and ceased.
Gone, whispered rude.
But wait, whispered Jones.
He knew the savage nature,
and he knew how to wait.
after a long time he cautiously crawled out of the thicket and searched the surroundings with
the plainsman eye.
He climbed the slope and saw the clouds of dust, the near one small, the far one large,
which told him all he needed to know.
Comanches?
queried Adams, with a quaver in his voice.
He was new to the plains.
Likely, said Jones, who thought it best not to tell all he knew.
Then he added to himself, we've no time to lose.
There's water back here somewhere.
The Indians have spotted the buffalo,
and we're running the horses away from the water.
The three got underway again, proceeding carefully,
so as not to raise the dust and head a dew southwest.
Scantier and Scantier grew the grass.
The hollows were washes of sand,
steely-grayed dunes like long, flat ocean swells,
rib the prairie.
The gray day declined.
Late into the purple night, they traveled,
then camped without fire.
In the gray morning, Jones climbed a high rise and scanned the southwest.
Low, dun-colored sand hills waved from him down and down and slow, deceptive descent.
A solitary and remote waste reached out into gray infinitude.
A pale lake, gray as the rest of the gray expanse glimmered in the distance.
Mirage, he muttered focusing his glass which only magnified all under the dead gray steel sky.
Water must be somewhere.
But can that be it?
It's too pale and elusive to be real.
No life of blasted steak plain.
Hello.
A thin black wavering line of wild powell,
moving in a beautiful rapid flight
crossed the line of his vision.
Geese flying north and low.
There's water here, he said.
He followed the flock with his glass,
saw them circle over the lake
and vanish in the gray sheen.
It's water.
He hurried back to the camp.
his haggard and worn companion scorned his discovery adam signing with rude who knew the plain said marraged the lure of the desert yet dominated by a force too powerful for them to resist they followed the buffalo hunter
all day the gleaming lake beckoned them onward and seemed to recede all day the drab clouds scutted before the cold north wind in the great twilight the lake suddenly lay before them as if it had opened at their feet the men rejoiced the horses lifted the nose of the night and the great twilight the lake suddenly lay before them as if it had opened at their feet the men rejoiced the horses lifted the nose
and sniffed the damp air.
The whinnies of the horses,
clank of harnesses and splash of water,
the whir of ducks,
did not blur out of Joan's keen ear,
a sound that made him jump,
was the thump of hoofs.
In a familiar beat, beat, beat.
He saw a shadow moving up a ridge,
soon outlined black against the yet light sky,
a lone buffalo cow stood like a statue.
A moment she held toward the lake,
studying the danger,
then went out of sight over the ridge,
bridge.
Jones spurred his horse up the ascent, which was rather long and steep, but he bounded
the summit in time to see the cow join eight huge shaggy buffalo.
The hunter reigned in his horse and standing high in his stirrups, held his hat at arm's length
over his head, so he thrilled to a moment he had sought for two years.
The last herd of American bison was near at hand.
The cow would not venture far from the main herd.
The eight stragglers were the old broken-down bulls that had been expelled at this season,
from the herd by younger and more vigorous bulls. The old monarchs saw the hunter at the same
time his eyes were gladdened by sight of them and lumbered away after the cow to disappear
in the gathering darkness. Brighton Buffalo always makes straight for their fellows, and this
knowledge contended Jones to return to the lake, well satisfied that the herd would not be far
away in the morning within easy striking distance by daylight.
At dark the storm which had threatened for days broke,
in a fury of rain sleet and hail.
The hunter stretched a piece of canvas over the wheels of the north side of the wagon,
and wet and shivering crawled under it to their blankets.
During the night the storm raged with unabated strength.
Dawn, forbidding and raw, lightened to the whistle of the sleety gusts.
Fire was out of the question.
Cherry of weight the hunters had carried no wood,
and the buffalo chips they used for fuel were lumps of ice.
Grumbling Adams and Rude ate a cold breakfast while Jones munching a biscuit,
faced the biting blast from the crest of the ridge.
The middle of the plain below held a ragged circular mass as still a stone.
It was the buffalo herd, with every shaggy head to the storm,
so they would stand never budging from their tracks
till the blizzard or sleet was over.
Jones, though eager and impatient, restrained himself, for it was unwise to begin operations
in the storm.
There was nothing to do but wait.
Ill-fared the hunters that day.
Food had to be eaten uncooked.
The long hours dragged by with the little group huddled under icy blankets.
When darkness fell, the sleep changed to drizzling rain.
This blew over at midnight, and a colder wind penetrating to the very marrow of the sleepless
men made their condition worse.
In the after part of the night, the wolves howled mournfully.
With a gray misty light appearing in the east,
Jones threw off his stiff ice-en-cased blanket and crawled out.
Got gray wolf the color of the day and the sand and the lake,
sneaked away, looking back.
While moving and threshing about to warm his frozen blood,
Jones munched another biscuit.
His men crawled from under the wagon and made an unfruitful search for the whiskey,
Fearing it, Jones had thrown the bottle away.
The man cursed.
Patient horses drooped sadly and shivered in the lee of the improvised tent.
Jones kicked the inch-thick casing of ice from his saddle.
Kentucky, his racer, had been spared on the whole trip for this day's work.
The thoroughbred was cold, but as Jones threw the saddle over him,
he showed that he knew the chase ahead and was eager to be off.
at last after repeated efforts with his benumbed fingers jones got the girth tight he tied a bunch of soft cords to the saddle and mounted follow as fast as you can he called to his surly men
the bluffs will run north against the wind this is the right direction for us we'll soon leave the sand stick to my trail and come a-homing from the ridge he met the red sun rising bright and a keen north easterly wind that lashed like a whip as he had anticipated his quay
Quarry had moved northward.
Kentucky led out into a swinging stride,
which in an hour had the loping herd in sight.
Every jump now took him upon higher ground,
where the sand failed and the grass grew thicker
and began to bend under the wind.
In the teeth of the nipping gale,
Joan slipped close upon the herd without alarming even a cow.
More than a hundred little reddish black calves
leisurely loped in the rear.
Kentucky came to his work,
crept on like a wolf,
and the hunter's great fist clenched the coiled lasso.
Before him expanded a boundless plain,
a situation long-cherished and dreamed of had become a reality.
Kentucky, fresh and strong, was good for all day.
Jones gloated over the little red bulls and heifers
as a miser gloats over gold and jewels.
Never before had he caught more than two in one day,
and often it had taken days to capture one.
This was the last herd.
This the last opportunity toward perpetuating a grand race of beasts, and with born instinct
he saw ahead the day of his life.
At a touch, Kentuck closed in and the buffalo, seeing him stampeded into a heaving roll
so well known to the hunter.
Racing on the right flank of the herd, Joan selected a tawny heifer and shot the lariat after
her.
It felt true, but being stiff and kinky from the sleet failed to tighten and the quick calf
Lipped through the loop to freedom.
Undismayed, the pursuer quickly recovered his rope.
Again, he whirled and sent the loop.
Again, his circle true and failed to close.
Again, the agile heifer bounded through it.
Jones whipped the air with a stubborn rope.
To lose a chance like that was worse than boys' work.
The third whirl, running a smaller loop,
tightened the coil round the frightened calf just back of its ears,
a pull on the bridle brought Kentucky to a halt in this tracks,
and the baby buffalo rolled over and over in the grass.
Jones bounced from his seat and jerked loose a couple of the soft cords in a twinkling.
His big knee crushed down on the calf and his big hands bounded helpless.
Kentucky Nade.
Jones saw his black ears go up, danger threatened.
For a moment the hunter's blood turned chill, not from fear,
for he never felt fear, but because he thought the Indians were returning to ruin his work.
His eye swept the plain, only the gray forms of wolves,
split it through the grass here, there, all about him. Wolves, they were as fatal to his enterprise
as savages. A trooping pack of prairie wolves had fallen in with the herd and hung close on the
trail, trying to cut a calf away from its mother. The grape-roots boldly trotted within
a few yards of him, and slyly looked at him with pale, fiery eyes. They had already sent it
as captive. Preccious time flew by, the situation critical and baffling, had never before
been met by him.
There lay his little cap tied fast, and to the north ran many others, some of which he must,
he would have.
To think quickly had meant the solving of many a plaintiffs' problem.
Should he stay with his prize to save it or leave it to be devoured?
Ah, you old great devils, he yelled, shaking his fist at the wolves, I know a trick or two.
Slipping his hat between the legs of the cap, he fastened it securely.
This done, he vaulted on Kentucky, and was off with never a backward glance.
certain it was that the wolves would not touch anything alive or dead
that bore the scent of a human being.
The bison scurried away a long half-mile in the lead,
sailing northward like a cloud shadow over the plain.
Kentucky, meddlesome, over-eager,
would have run himself out in short order,
but the wary hunter, strong to restrain as well as impel,
with the long day in his mind,
kept the steed in his easy stride,
which, brinkily and stretching, overhauled the herd
in a course of several miles.
A dash, a whirl, a shock, a leap,
horse and hunter working in perfect accord,
and a fine big calf, bellowing lustily,
struggled desperately for freedom under the remorseless knee.
The big hands toyed with him,
and then secure in the double knots,
the calf lay still,
sticking out his tongue,
and rolling his eyes with the coat of the hunter
tucked under his bounds to keep away the wolves.
The race had but begun.
The horse had but warmed to his work,
the hunter had but tasted of sorts,
sweet triumph. Another hopeful of a buffalo mother negligent in danger, true and from his
brothers, stumbled and fell in the meshing loop. The hunter's vest slipped over the calf's neck,
served as danger signal to the wolves. Before the lumbering buffalo missed their loss, another red
and black baby kicked helplessly on the grass and set up vain weak calls, and at last lay still,
with the hunter's boot tied to his cords. Four, Jones counted them aloud in his mind. He kept
on, fast hard work, covering upward of 15 miles, had begun to tell on herd, horse and man,
and all slowed down to the call for strength. The fifth time Jones closed in on his game. He
encountered different circumstances such as called forth his cunning. The herd had opened up. The
mothers had fallen back to the rear. The calves hung almost out of sight under the shaggy sides of
protectors. To try them out, Jones started close in and threw his lassoe. It struck a cow.
activity incredible and such a huge beast, she lunged at him, Kentucky, expecting just such a move,
wheeled to safety. This duel, ineffectual on both sides, kept up for a while, and all the time
man and herd were jogging rapidly to the north.
Jones could not let well enough alone. He acknowledged this even as he swore he must have five,
emboldened by his marvelous luck, and yielding headlong to the passion within, he threw caution to the winds.
A lame old cow with a red cap caught his eye.
And he spurred his willing horse and slung his rope.
It stung the haunch of the mother.
The mad grunt she vetted was no quicker than the velocity with which she plunged and reared.
Jones had but time to swing his leg over the saddle when the hoofs beat down.
Kentucky rolled on the plane, flinging his rider from him.
The infuriated buffalo lowered her head for the fatal charge on the horse
when they planesmen, jerking out his heavy colts, shot her dead.
in her tracks.
Kentucky got to his feet unhurt and stood his ground,
quivering and butt-ready,
showing his steadfast courage.
He showed more,
for his ears lay back and his eyes had the gleam of the animal that strikes back.
The calf ran round its mother.
Jones lassuted and tied it down,
being compelled to cut a piece from his lasso,
as the cords of the saddle had given out.
He left his other boot with baby number five.
The still heaving smoking body of the victim called forth the stern
and trepid hunter's pity for a moment.
Spill of blood he had not wanted,
but he had not been able to avoid it.
And mounting again with close shut jaw and smoldering eye,
he galloped to the north.
Kentucky snorted.
The pursuing wolf shied off in the grass.
The pale sun began to slant westward.
The cold iron stirrups froze and cut the hunter's bootless feet.
When once more he came hounding the buffalo,
they were considerably winded,
Short-tuffed tails raised swiftly gave warnings, snorts-like puffs of escaping steam,
and deep grunts from cavernous chest, evinced anger and impatience that might at any moment
bring the herd to a defiant stand.
He whizzed the shortened noose over the head of a calf that was laboring painfully to
keep up, and it slipped down when a mighty grunt told him of peril.
Never looking to see whence it came he sprang into the saddle, if I recall.
Kentucky, jumped into action, and hauled up with a shock that almost threw himself and the rider.
The lassoe fast to the horse and its loop-end round the calf had caused the sudden check.
A madden cow bore down on Kentucky.
The gallant horse straightened in a jump, but dranking the calf, pulled him in a circle.
And at another moment he was running round and round, the howling, kicking pivot.
Then ensued a terrible race with horse and bison describing a 20-foot circle.
Bang! Bang!
Fire two shots and heard the spats of the bullets, but they only augmented the frenzy of
the beast.
Faster, Kinnuck flew.
Snorting in terror, closer drew the dusty, bouncing pursuer.
The calf spun like atop.
The lassoe strung to tighter than wire.
Joan strained to loosen the fastening, but in vain.
He swore at his carelessness in dropping his knife by the last calf he had tied.
He thought of shooting the rope, yet dared not risk the shot.
A hollow sound turned him again.
The Colts leveled, bang, dust flew from the ground beyond the bison.
The two charges left in a gun were all that stood between him and eternity,
with a desperate display of strength, Jones threw his weight in a backward pull,
and hauled can tuck up.
Then he leaned far back in the saddle and shoved the Colts out beyond the horse's flank,
down with the broad head with its black glistening horns.
Bang!
She slid forward with a crash, plowing the ground with hoofs and nose,
Spouted blood uttered a hoarse cry, kicked and died.
Kentucky, for once completely terrorized, reared and plunged from the cow, dragging the calf,
stern command and iron harm forced him to a standstill.
The calf nearly strangled, recovered when the noose was slipped,
and moaned of feeble protest against life and captivity.
The remainder of Jones's lasso went to bind number six,
and one of his socks went to serve as a reminder to the persistent wolves.
Six. On, on, Kentucky on. Weakening, but unconscious of it, with bloody hands and feet without
lasso, and with only one charge in his revolver, hatless, coatless, vestless, bootless,
the wild hunter urged on the noble horse. The herd had gained miles in the interval of the fight.
Gamed to the backbone, Kentucky, lengthen out, to overhaul it, and slowly the rolling gap,
lessened and lessened, a long hour thumped away with the rumbling, growing,
nearer. Once again, the lagging calves dotted the grassy plain before the hunter. He dashed beside
a burly calf, grasped at tail, stopped his horse, and jumped. The calf went down with him,
and did not come up. The knotted blood-stained hand like claws of steel bound the hind legs
close and fast with a leather and belt, and left between them a thorn and bloody sock.
Seven on, O faithful, we must have another the last. This is your day.
The blood that flecked the hunter was not all his own.
The sun slanted westwardly toward the purpling horizon.
The grassy plain gleamed like a ruffled sea of grass.
The gray wolves loped on.
When next the hunter came within sight of the herd over a wavy ridge,
changes in its shape had movement, met his gaze.
The calves were almost done.
They could run no more.
Their mothers faced the south and trotted slowly to and fro.
The bulls were grunting, herding, pining close.
It looked as if the herd meant to do.
stand and fight. This mattered little to the hunter, who had captured seven calves since dawn.
The first limping calf he reached tried to elude the grasping hand and failed, Kentucky,
had been trained to wheel to the right or left, in whichever way his rider leaned. And as Joe
bent over and caught the upraised tail, the horse turned to strike the calf with both front
hoofs. The cap rolled, the horse plunged down, the rider sped beyond to the dust.
Though the calf was tired, he still could bellow,
and he filled the air with robust balls.
Jones, all at once, saw twenty or more buffalo dash in at him
with fast, twinkling short legs.
With the thought of it, he was in the air to the saddle.
As the black round mounds charged from every direction, Kentucky,
led out with all there was left in him.
He leaped and whirled, pitched and swerved,
in a roaring, clashing, dusty melee,
being hoofs through the turf,
flying tails whipped the air,
and everywhere were dusky, sharp-pointed heads, tossing low.
Kentucky squeezed out, unscathed, the mob of bison bristling,
turned to lumber after the main herd.
Jones seized his opportunity and rode after them,
yelling with all his might.
He drove them so hard that soon the little fellows lag paces behind.
Only one or two old cows straggled with the calves.
Then, willing Kentucky, he cut between the herd and a calf and rode it down.
bewildered, the tossal little bull bellowed in great of fright.
The hunter seized the stiff tail, and calling to his horse, leaped off,
but his strength was far spent, and the buffalo,
larger than his fellows, thrashed about and jerked in terror.
Jones threw it again and again, but it struggled up,
never once ceasing its loud demands for help.
Finally the hunter tripped it up and fell upon it with his knees.
Above the rumble of retreating hooves,
Jones heard the familiar short, quick, jarring pound on the turf.
Kentucky knayed his alarm and raced to the right.
Baring down on the hunter, hurtling through the air,
was a giant furry mass.
Instinct with fierce life and power, the buffalo cow, robbed for young.
With his senses almost numb, barely able to pull and rise the colt, the plainsman,
willed to live and to keep his captive.
His leveled arm wavered like a leaf in a storm.
Bang!
Fire, smoke, a shock, a jarring crash, and silence.
The calf stirred beneath him.
He put out a hand to touch a warm furry coat.
The mother had fallen beside him.
Lifting a heavy hoof, he laid it over the neck of the calf
to serve as additional weight.
He lay still and listened.
The rumble of the herd died away in the distance.
The evening waned.
Still the hunter lay quiet.
From time to time the calf struggled and bellowed.
Like gray wolves appeared on all sides.
They prowled about with hunting.
hungry howls and shoved black-tipped noses through the grass. The sun sank and the sky paled
to oval blue, a star shone out, then another and another. Over the prairie slanted the first dark
shadow of night. Suddenly the hunter laid his ear to the ground and listened. Faint beats like
throbs of a pulsing heart, shuddered from the soft turf. Strongly they grew till the hunter
raised his head. Dark forms approached. Voices broke the silence. The creaking of a wagon scared
away the wolves.
This way, shouted the hunter weakly.
Ah, there he is hurt, cried rude, vaulting the wheel.
Buy up this calf.
How many did you find?
The voice grew fainter.
Seven alive and in good shape, and all your clothes.
But the last words fell on unconscious ears.
End of chapter three.
Chapter four of the last plainsman by Zane Gray.
This Lieberwark's recording is in the public domain, recording by Mike Vendetti.
for the last plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 4.
The Trail.
Right.
What do we do about horses?
Ask, Jones.
Jim will want to bay, and of course you'll want to ride spot.
The rest of our nags will only do to pack the outfit.
I've been thinking, replied to Foreman.
You sure will need good mounts.
Now it happens that a friend of mine is just at this time at House Rock Valley,
an outlying post of one of the big Utah ranches.
He is getting in the horse-es.
is off the range and he has some cracking good ones. Let's ooze over there. It's only 30 miles and
get some horses from him. We were all eager to act upon Frank's suggestion. So plans were made for
the three of us to ride over and select our mounts. Frank and Jim would follow with the pack train,
and if all went well, on the following evening, we would camp under the shadow of buckskin.
Early next morning we were on our way. I tried to find a soft place on a soft place on
old baldy, one of Frank's pack-horses. He was a horse that would not have raised up at the
trumpet of doom. Nothing under the sun, Frank said, bothered old baldy but the operation of shoeing.
We made the distance to the outpost by noon and found Frank's friend a genial and obliging cowboy,
who said we could have all the horses we wanted. While Jones and Wallace strutted around
the big corral, which was full of vicious, dusty, shaggy horses and Mustangs, I sat high on
the fence. I heard them talking about points and girth and stride and a lot of terms that I could
not understand. Wallace selected a heavy sorrel and Jones of Big Bay, very like gems. I had observed
way over in the corner of a corral, a bunch of cayuses and among them a clean, limbed black horse.
Edging round on the fence, I got a closer view, and then cried out that I had found my horse.
I jumped down and caught him, much to my surprise.
eyes, for the other horses were wild and had kicked viciously. The black was beautifully built,
wide-chested and powerful, but not heavy. His coat glistened like sheeny black satin,
and he had a white face and white feet and a long mane.
"'I don't know about giving you Satan. That's his name,' said the cowboy.
The foreman rides him often. He's the fastest, the best climber, and the best dispositioned horse
on the range.
But I guess I can let you have him.
He continued when he saw my disappointed face.
By George, exclaimed Jones,
You've got it on us this time.
You'd like to trade, ask Wallace, as his sorrel tried to bite him.
That black looks sort of fierce.
I led my prize out of the corral,
up to the little cabin nearby,
where I tied him and proceeded to get acquainted after a fashion of my own.
The not-versed in horse lore,
I knew that half the battle,
was to win his confidence.
I smoothed his silky coat and patted him,
and then surreptitiously slipped a lump of sugar from my pocket.
The sugar which I had purloined in Flagstaff
and carried all the way across the desert was somewhat
disreputably soiled and Satan sniffed at it disdainfully.
Evidently he had never smelled or tasted sugar.
I pressed it into his mouth, he munched it,
and then looked me over with some interest.
I handed him another lump.
He took it and rubbed his nose against me.
Satan was mine.
Frank and Jim came along early in the afternoon.
What with packing, changing saddles, and shoeing the horses,
we were all busy.
Old Baldy would not be shot,
so we let him off till a more opportune time.
By four o'clock we were riding toward the slopes of buckskin,
now only a few miles away, standing up higher and darker.
What's that for? inquired Wallace, pointing to a long,
rusty, wire-wrapped, double-barreled blunderbuss of a shotgun, stuck in the holster of Jones's
saddle. The colonel, who had been having a fine time with the impatient and curious hounds,
did not vouchsafe any information on that score. But very shortly we were destined to learn the
use of this incongruous firearm. I was riding in advance of Wallace and a little behind Jones.
The dogs, excepting Jude, who had been kicked and lamed, were ranging along before their
master. Suddenly right before me I saw an immense jackrabbit, and just then Moes and Don caught
sight of it. In fact, Moes bumped his blunt nose into the rabbit. When it leaped into scared action,
Moes yelped, and Don followed suit. Then they were after it in wild, clamorous pursuit. Jones let out
the centaurian blast now becoming familiar, and spurred after them. He reached over,
pulled the shotgun out of the holster, and fired both barrels at the jumping down.
dogs. I expressed my amazement in strong language and Wallace whistled. Don came sneaking back
with his tail between his legs and Moes, who had coward, as if stung, circled around ahead of
us. Joe's finally succeeded in getting him back. Come in you. Measley rabbit dogs. What do you
mean chasing off that way? We're after lions. Lions. Lions, understand? Don looked thorough
convinced of his error, but Moes, being more thick-headed, appeared mystified.
rather than hurt or frightened.
Size shot, do you use, I ask.
Number ten.
They don't hurt much at 75 yards, replied our leader.
I use them as sort of a long arm.
You see, the dogs must be made to know what we're after.
Ordinary means would never do in a case like this.
My idea is to break them off coyotes, wolves, and deer.
And when we cross the lion trail, we'll let them go.
I'll teach them sooner than you'd
think. Only we must get where we can see what they were trailing. Then I can tell whether to call
them back or not. The sun was gliding the rim of the desert ramparts when we began the ascent of the
foothills of buckskin. A steep trail wound zigzag up the mountain. We let our horses as it was a long,
hard climb. From time to time I stopped to catch my breath. I gazed away across the growing
void to the gorgeous pink cliffs far above and beyond the red wall, which had seemed so high
and then out toward the desert. The reggae-ragged crack in the plain apparently only a threat
of broken ground was the Grand Canyon. How unutterably remote, wild grand was that world
of red and brown of purple pall of vague outline. Two thousand feet probably, we mounted to what
Frank called Little Buckskin.
In the west a copper glow,
ridged with lead-colored clouds,
marked where the sun had set.
The air was very thin and icy cold.
At the first clump of Pennian Pines,
we made dry camp.
When I sat down, it was as if I had been anchored.
Frank solicitly remarked that I looked sort of beat.
Jim built a roaring fire,
and began getting supper.
A snow-swall came on the rushing wind.
The air grew colder, and though I hugged the fire I could not get warm.
When I had satisfied my hunger, I rolled out my sleeping bag and crept into it.
I stretched my aching limbs and did not move again.
Once I awoke drowsily, feeling the warmth of the fire,
and I heard Frank say, he's asleep, dead to the world.
He's all in, said Jones.
Writing what did it?
You know how a horse tears a man to pieces.
Will it be able to stand it?
Ask Frank with as much solicitude as if he were my brother.
When you get out after anything, well, you're hell.
And think of country we're going into.
I know you've never seen the breaks of this sea wash,
but I have and it's the worst and roughest country I ever saw.
Breaked after breaks like the ridges on a washboard,
heading on the south slope of bucking and running,
down side by side, miles and miles deeper and deeper, till they run into that awful hole.
It will be a killing trip on men, horses, and dogs.
Now, Mr. Wallace, he's been camping and ruffing with the Navajo's for months.
He's in some kind of shape, but, uh, Frank concluded his remark with a dumpful pause.
I'm some worried, too, replied Jones.
But he would come.
He stood the desert well enough, even the Mormons said that.
In the ensuing silence the fire sputtered,
the glare fitfully merged into dark shadows under the weird pinions,
and the wind moaned through the short branches.
Well, drawled a slow, soft voice.
Sure, I reckon you're hollering too soon.
Frank's measly trick putting him on spot showed me.
He rode out on spot and he rode in on spot.
Sure he'll stay.
It was not all the warmth of the blankets that glowed over me then.
The voices died away dreamily, and my eyelids dropped sleepily tight.
Late in the night I sat up suddenly, roused by some unusual disturbance.
Fire was dead, the wind swept with a rush through the pinions.
From the black darkness came the staccato chorus of coyotes.
Don barked his displeasure, sounder made the Wilken ring.
And old mows growled low and deep, grumbling, like muttered thunder.
Then all was quiet and a slip.
Dawn, rosy red, confronted me when I opened my eyes.
Breakfast was ready. Frank was packing old baldy.
Jones talked to his horse as he saddled him.
Wallace came stooping his giant figure under the pinions.
The dog's eager and soft-eyed sat around Jim and begged.
The sun peeped over the pink cliffs.
The desert still lay asleep.
tranced in a purple and golden-streaked mist.
Come, come, said Jones in his big voice.
We're slow, here's the sun.
Easy, easy, easy, replied Frank, we've got all the time there is.
When Frank threw the saddle over Satan, I interrupted him and said,
I would care for my horse henceforward.
Soon we were underway, the horses fresh, the dogs scenting the keen cold air.
The trail rolled over the ridges of pinion and scrubbed,
PIN. Occasionally, we could see the black, ragged crest of buckskin above us.
From one of these ridges, I took my last long look back at the desert, and engraved on my mind
a picture of the red wall, and the many-hued ocean of sand. The trail, narrow and indistinct,
mounted the last slow-rising slope. The pinions failed, and the scrubby pines became
abundant. At length, we reached the top and entered the great arched aisles of buckskin
forest. The ground was flat as a table. Magnificent pine trees with branches high and spreading
gave the eye glad welcome. Some of these monarchs were eight feet thick at the base and two hundred
feet high. Here and there one lay gaunt and prostrate, a victim of the wind. The smell of
Pitch pine was sweetly overpowering.
When I went through here two weeks ago,
the snow was a foot deep and abogged in places, said Frank.
The sun has been oozing around here some.
I'm afraid Jones won't find any snow on this end of Buckskin.
Thirty miles of winding trail,
brown and springy from its thick mat of pine needles,
shaded always by the massive semy bark trees,
took us over the extremity of buckskin.
Then we faced down into the head of a ravine
that ever grew down.
deeper, stonier and rougher. I shifted from side to side from leg to leg, and my saddle dismounted
and hobbled before Satan, mounted again and rode on. Jones called the dogs and complained to
them of the lack of snow. Wallace sat his horse comfortably, taking long pulls at his pipe, and long
gazes at the shaggy sides of the ravine. Frank, energetic and tireless, kept the pack-horses in the
trail. Jim jogged on silently. And so we rode down.
to Oak Spring.
The spring was pleasantly situated
in a grove of oaks and pinions
under the shadow of three cliffs.
Three ravines opened here
into an oval valley.
A rude cabin of rough hewn logs
stood near the spring.
Get down, get down, sang out, Frank.
We'll hang up here.
Beyond oak is no man's land.
We take our chances on water
after we leave here.
When we had unsaddled,
unpacked, and got her fire
roaring on the wide stone hearth of the cabin, it was once again night.
Boys, said Jones after supper, we're now on the edge of the lion country.
Frank saw a lion sign in here only two weeks ago, and though the snow is gone, we stand
a show of finding tracks in the sand and dust.
Tomorrow morning, before the sun gets a chance at the bottom of these ravines, we'll be
up in doing.
We'll each take a dog and search in different directions.
Keep the dog in leash, and when he opens up, examine the ground carefully for tracks.
If a dog opens on any track that you are sure isn't a lion's punish him.
And when a lion track is found, hold the dog in, wait, and signal.
We'll use a signal I have tried and found far-reaching and easy to yell.
Wah-hoo! That's it.
Once yelled, it means come.
Twice means come quickly.
three times means calm, danger.
In one corner of the cabin was a platform of poles covered with straw.
I threw the sleeping bag on this and was soon stretched out.
Miss Givings as to my strength worried me before I closed my eyes.
Once on my back I felt I could not rise.
My chest was sore.
My cough deep and rasping, it seemed I had scarcely closed my eyes
when Joan's impatient voice recalled me from sweet oblivion.
Frank, Frank, stay light, Jim, boys, he called.
I tumbled out in a gray-want twilight.
It was cold enough to make the fire acceptable,
but nothing like the morning before on buckskin.
Come to the festal board, draw, Jim,
almost before I had my boots laced.
Jones, said Frank,
Jim and I'll ooze around here today.
There's lots to do, and we want to have things hitched
right before we strike for the sea-wash.
We've got to shoe old Baldi,
and if we can't get him locale,
it'll take all of us to do it.
The light was still gray when Jones let off with Don,
Wallace was Sounder, and I with Moves.
Jones directed us to separate,
follow the dry stream beds in the ravines,
and remember his instructions given the night before.
The vene to the right, which I entered,
was choked with huge stones fallen from the cliff above,
and pinions growing thick,
and I wondered apprehensively
how a man could evade a wild animal
in such a place, much less chase it.
Old Moes pulled on his chain
and sniffed a coyote and deer tracks,
and every time he venced such interest in such,
I cut him with a switch,
which, to tell the truth, he did not notice.
I thought I heard a shout,
and holding Moes tight, waited and listened.
Wahoo! Wahoo!
Floated on the air,
rather deadened as if it had come
from round the train,
angular cliff that faced into the valley.
Urging and dragging moes,
I ran down the ravine as fast as I could,
and soon encountered Wallace coming from the middle ravine.
Jones, he said excitedly, this way.
There's the signal again.
We dashed in haste for the mouth of the third ravine
and came suddenly upon Jones,
kneeling under a pinion tree.
Boys, look, he exclaimed as he pointed to the ground.
There, clearly defined in the dust, was a cat track,
as big as my spread hand,
and the mere sight of it set a chill of my spine.
There's a lion-track for you,
made by a female, two-year-old,
but can't say if she passed here last night.
Don won't take the trail.
Try Moes.
I led Moes to the big round imprint
and put his nose down into it.
The old hound sniffed and sniffed,
then lost interest.
Cold, ejaculated Jones.
No go.
Try sounder.
Come, well, boy, you've got a nose for it.
He urged the reluctant hound forward.
Sounder needed not to be shown the trail.
He stuck his nose in it, and stood very quiet for a long moment.
Then he quivered slightly, raised his nose, and sought the next track.
Step by step, he went slowly, doubtfully.
All at once his tail wagged stiffly.
Look at that, cried Jones in delight.
He's caught a scent when the others couldn't.
Hey, Moes, get back.
Keep Moes and Don back.
Give him room.
slowly sounder paced up the ravine as carefully as if he were travelling on thin ice he passed the dusty open trail to a scaly ground with little bits of grass and he kept on we were electrified to hear him give vent to a deep bugle blast note of eagerness
"'By George, he's got it, boys!' exclaimed Jones, as he lifted the stubborn, struggling hound off the trail.
"'I know that bay. It means a lion passed here this morning, and we'll get him up as sure as you're alive.
Come, Sounder. Now for the horses.'
As we ran pell-mell into the little glade, where Jim sat mending some saddle-trapping, Franks strode up the trail with the horses.
"'Well, I heard Sounder,' he said with his genial smile.
something's coming off, huh?
You'll have to ooze round some to keep up with that hound.
I saddled Satan with fingers that trembled in excitement
and pushed my little Remington automatic into the rifle holster.
Boys, listen, said our leader.
We're off now in the beginning of a hunt new to you.
Remember, no shooting, no bloodletting, except in self-defense.
Keep as close to me as you can, listen for the dogs,
and when you fall behind or separate, yell out,
The signal cry.
Don't forget this.
We're bound to lose each other.
Look out for the spikes and branches on the trees.
If the dog split, whoever follows the one the trees they line on must wait there till the rest come up.
Off now.
Come, Sounder, Moes, you rascal, Iya, come Don, come puppy, and take your medicine.
Except Moes, the hounds were all trembling and running eagerly to and fro.
When Sounder was loosed, he let them in a beeline to the trail.
with us catering after. Sounder worked exactly as before, only he followed the lion and
tracks a little further up the ravine before he bade. He kept going faster and faster,
occasionally letting out one deep, short yelp. The other hounds did not give tongue, but eager,
excited, baffled, kept at his heels. The ravine was long, and the wash at the bottom of which
the lion had proceeded, turned and twisted round boulders' large as houses, and led through dense rows
of some short, rough shrub.
Now and then the lion tracks
showed plainly in the sand, for five
miles or more, Sounder led us up
the ravine, which began to contract
and grow steep. The dry stream bed got to be full of thickets
of popular, tall, straight, branchless saplings,
about the size of a man's arm,
and growing so close, we had to press them aside
to let our horses through.
Presently Sounder slowed up,
and appeared at fault. We found him
puzzling over an open, grassy patch,
and after nosing it for a little while,
he began skirting the edge.
Cute dog, declared Jones.
That Sounder will make a lion chaser.
Our game has gone up here somewhere.
Sure enough, Sounder directly gave tongue
from the side of the ravine.
It was climb for us now.
Broken shale rocks of all dimensions,
pinions down and pinions up
made ascending no easy problem.
We had to dismount and lead our horses.
Thus losing ground, Jones forged ahead
and reached the top of the ravine first.
When Wallace and I got up, breathing heavily,
Jones and the hounds were out of sight,
but Sounder kept voicing his clear call,
giving us our direction.
Off we flew, overground that was still rough,
but enjoyable going compared to the ravine slopes.
The ridge was sparsely covered with cedar and pinion,
through which far ahead we pretty soon spied Jones.
Wallace signaled and our leader answered twice.
We caught up with him on the brink of another ravine
deeper and cragier than the first full of dead gnarled pinion and splintered rocks.
This gulch is the largest of the three that head in at Oak Spring, said Jones.
Boys, don't forget your direction.
Always keep a feeling where camp is.
Always sense it every time you turn.
The dogs have gone down.
That lion is in here somewhere.
Maybe he lives down in the high cliffs near the spring and came up here last night.
For a kill he's buried somewhere.
Lions never travel far.
Ark, arc.
They're sounder, and the rest of them.
They've got dissent.
They've all got it.
Tom boys down and ride.
With that he crashed into the cedar
with a way that showed me
how impervious he was to slashing branches
sharp as thorns and steep descent and peril.
Wallace's big sorrow plunged after him
and the rolling stones cracked.
Suffering as I was by this time,
with cramp in my legs and torturing pain,
I had to choose between holding my horse,
in or falling off. So I chose the former and accordingly got behind. Dead cedar and
pinion trees lay everywhere, with their contorted limbs reaching out like the arms of de
devilfish. Stones blocked every opening. Making the bottom of the ravine after what seemed
an interminable time, I found the tracks of Jones and Wallace. Along wahoo, drew me on.
Then the mellow bay of a hound floated up the ravine. Satan made up time and
in the sandy stream bed, but kept me busy dodging overhanging branches.
I became aware after a succession of efforts to keep from being strung on pinions
that the sand before me was clean and trackless.
Hawing Satan up sharply, I waited irresolutely and listened.
Then from high up in the ravine side waved down a medley of yelps and barks.
Wahoo, wahoo!
Ringing down the slope, peeled against the cliff behind me
and set the wild echoes flying.
Satan of his own accord, headed up the incline.
Surprised at this, I gave him free rein.
How he did climb.
Not long did it take me to discover that he picked out easier going than I had.
Once I saw Jones crossing a ledge far above me,
and I yelled our signal cry.
The answer returned clear and sharp.
Then its echo crackled under the hollow cliff,
and crossing and recrossing the ravine, it died at last, far away,
like the muffled peal of a bell-boy.
Again, I heard the blended yelping of the hounds, and closer at hand, I saw a long, low cliff above and decided that the hounds were running at the base of it.
Another chorus of yelps quicker, wilder than the others, drew a yell from me. Instinctively I knew the dogs had jumped game of some kind.
Satan knew it as well as I, for he quickened his base and sent the stones clattering behind him.
I gained the base of the yellow cliff, but found no tracks in the dust of ages that had crumbled in its shepherds.
nor did he hear the dogs, considering how close they had seemed this was strange.
I halted and listened.
Silence reigned supreme.
The ragged cracks in the cliff walls could have harbored many a watching lion,
and I cast an apprehensive glance into their dark confines.
Then I turned my horse to get around the cliff and over the ridge.
When I again stopped, all I could hear was the thumping of my heart,
and the laboring panting of Satan.
I came to a break in the cliff, a steep place of weathered rock.
and I put Satan to it.
He went up with a will.
From the narrow saddle of the ridge crest,
I tried to take my bearings.
Below me slanted the green of pinion,
with leeched treetops,
standing like spears and uprising yellow stones.
Pensing, I heard a gunshot.
I leaned a straining ear against the soft breeze.
The proof came presently in the unmistakable report
of Jones's blunderbuss.
It was repeated almost instantly,
giving reality to the direction.
which was down the slope of what i concluded must be the third ravine wondering what was the meaning of the shots and chagrined because i was out of the race but calmer in mind i let set and stand
hardly a moment elapsed before a sharp bark tingled my ears it belonged to old moz soon i distinguished a rattling of stones and the sharp metallic cliques of hoofs striking rocks then into a space below me loped a beautiful deer so large that at first i took it for an elk
another sharp bark near this time told the tale of moses dereliction in a few moments he came in sight running with his tongue out and his head held high ay ay ay you old glad eater ha ya i yelled and yelled again
Moes passed over the saddle on the trail of the deer,
and his short bark floated back to remind me how far he was from a lion dog.
Then I divined the meaning of the shotgun reports.
The hounds had crossed a fresher trail than that of the lion,
and our leader had discovered it.
Despite a keen appreciation of Jones's task,
I gave way to amusement,
and repeated Wallace's paradoxial formula.
Pet the lions and shoot the hounds.
So I headed down in ravine,
looking for a blunt, bold crag, which I had described from camp.
I found it before long, and, profiting by past failures to judge of distance,
gave my first impression a great stretch, and then decided that I was more than two miles from oak.
Long after two miles had been covered, and I had begun to associate Jim's biscuits
with a certain soft seat near a ruddy fire.
I was apparently still the same distance from my landmark crag.
Suddenly a slight noise brought me to a halt.
I listened intently.
Only an indistinct rattling of small rocks
disturbed the impressive stillness.
It might have been the weathering that goes on constantly,
and it might have been an animal.
I inclined to the former idea
till I saw Satan's ears go up.
Jones had told me to watch the ears of my horse.
In short, as had been my acquaintance with Satan,
I had learned that he always discovered things more quickly than I.
so I waited patiently.
From time to time, a rattling roll of pebbles,
almost musical caught my ears.
It came from the base of the wall of Yellow Cliff,
and barred the summit of all those ridges.
Satan threw up his head and nosed the breeze.
The delicate, almost stealthy sounds,
the action of my horse,
the waiting drove my heart to extra work.
The breeze quickened and fanned my cheek,
and borne upon it came the faint and far-away bay of a hound.
It came again and again.
each time nearer.
Then on a stronger puff of wind
rang the clear, deep, mellow call
that had given Sounder his beautiful name.
Never it seemed had I heard music so blood-stirring.
Sounder was on the trail of something,
and he had it headed my way.
Satan heard, shot up his long ears,
and tried to go ahead.
But I restrained and soothed him into quiet.
Long moments I sat there
with the poignant consciousness of the wildness
of the scene,
of the significant rattling of the stones
and of the bell-tonged hound,
baying incessantly,
sending warm joy through my veins.
The absorption in sensations now,
yielding only to the hunting instinct
when Satan snorted and quivered.
Again, the deep-tong bay rang
into the silence,
with the stirring thrill of life,
and a sharp rattling of stones
just above brought another snort from Satan.
Across an open space and opinions,
a gray form flashed.
I leapt off Satan.
and knelt to get a better view under the trees.
I soon made out another deer passing along the base of the cliff.
Nodding again, I rode up to the cliff to wait for Sounder.
A long time I had to wait for the hound.
It proved that the atmosphere was as deceiving in regard to sound as to sight.
Finally, Sounder came running along the wall.
I got off to intercept him, the crazy fellow.
He had never responded to my overtures of friendship,
uttered short, sharp yelps of delight in action.
actually left in my arms. But I could not hold him. He darted upon the trail again and paid
no heed to my angry shouts. With a resolve to overhaul him, I jumped on Satan and whirled after the
hound. The black stretched out with such a stride that I was at pains to keep my seat. I dodged
the jutting rocks and projecting snags, felt stinging branches in my face, and the rush of sweet, dry
wind, under the crumbling walls over slopes of weathered stone and droppings of shelving rock.
round protruding noses of cliff over and under pinion satan thundered he came out on top of the ridge at the narrow back i called a saddle here i caught a glimpse of sounder far below going down into the ravine from which i had ascended some time before i called him but i might as well called to the wind
Wary to the point of exhaustion, I once more turned Satan toward camp.
I lay forward on his neck and let him have his will.
Far down the ravine, I awoke to strange sound
and soon recognized the cracking of iron-shod hoofs against stone, then voices,
turning an abrupt bend in the sandy wash I ran into Jones and Wallace.
Fall in.
Line up in a sad procession, said Jones.
Tage and the pup are faithful.
The rest of the dogs are somewhere between the grand camp,
in the Utah desert.
I related my adventures and tried to spare Moes and Sounder as much as conscious would
permit.
Hard luck, commented Jones.
Just as the hounds jumped the cougar.
Oh, they bounced him out of the rocks all right.
Don't you remember just under the cliff wall where you and Wallace came up to me?
Well, just as they jumped him, they ran right into fresh deer tracks.
I saw one of the deer.
Now that's too much for any hounds except those trains.
for lions. Shot at Moes twice, but couldn't turn him. He has to be hurt. They've all got to be
hurt to make them understand. Wallace told of a wild ride somewhere in Jones's wake, and of sundry
knocks and bruises he had sustained, of pieces of corduroy he had left decorating the cedars,
and of a most humiliating event, where a gaunt and bare pinion snag had penetrated under his belt
and lifted him, mad and kicking off his horse.
These western nags will hang you on a limb every chance they get, declared Jones,
and don't you overlook that.
Well, there's the cabin.
We'd better stay here for a few days or a week,
and break in the dogs and horses for this day's work was apple pie,
to what we'll get in the seawash.
I groaned inwardly and was remorselily glad to see Wallace fall off his horse
and walk on one leg to the cabin.
When I got my saddle off Satan
had given him a drink and hobbled him
I crept into the cabin and dropped like a log
I felt as if every bone in my body was broken
and my flesh was raw.
I got gleeful gratification from Wallace's complaints
and Jones remarked that he had a stitch in his back
so ended the first chase after Cougars.
End of Chapter 4
Chapter 5 of the last plainsman by Zane Gray
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, recording by Mike Vendetti.
The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray.
Chapter 5
Oak Spring
Mose and Don and Sounder
straggled into camp next morning, hungry, foot sore, and scared.
And as they limped in, Jones met them with characteristic speech.
Well, you decided to come in when you got hungry and tired.
Never thought of how you fooled me, did you?
now the first thing you get is a good licking he tied them in a little log-pin near the cabin and whipped them soundly and the next few days while wallace and i rested he took them out separately and deliberately ran them over coyote and deer trails
sometimes we heard his stinorian yell as a forerunner to the blast from his old shotgun then again we heard the shots unheralded by the yell wallace and i waxed warm under the collar over this peculiarly
method of training dogs, and each of us made dire threats.
But injustice to their implacable trainer, the dogs never appeared to be hurt,
never a splotted blood fleckered on their glossy coats, nor did they ever come home limping.
Sounder grew wise, Don gave up, but Mose appeared not to change.
All hands ready to rustle?
Sang out Frank one morning?
Oh, Baldi's got to be shot.
This brought us all except Jones out of the cabin, to see that.
the object of Frank's anxiety tied to a nearby oak.
At first I failed to recognize Old Baldy.
Vanished was his slow, sleepy, apathetic manner that it characterized him.
His ears lay back on his head, fire flashed from his eyes.
When Frank threw down the kit bag which emitted a metallic clanking,
old Baldy sat back on his haunches, planted his four feet deep in the ground,
and plainly as a horse could speak, said,
No.
Sometimes he's bad, and sometimes he's worse.
growled Frank.
Sure, he'd plumb bad this morning, replied Jim.
Frank got the three of us to hold Baldi's head and pull him up.
Then he ventured to lift a hind foot over his knee.
Old Baldi straightened out his leg and sent Frank sprawling into the dirt.
Twice again, Frank patiently tried to hold a hind leg with the same result.
And then he lifted a forefoot.
Baldi uttered a very intelligible snort, bit through Wallace's glove,
yanked Jim off his feet and scared me so that I let go of his forelock.
Then he broke the rope which held him to the tree.
There was a plunge, a scattering of men,
though Jim still valiantly held on to Baldi's head
and a thrashing of scrub pinion,
where Baldy reached out vigorously with his hind feet.
But for Jim, he would have escaped.
Well, it's all the row, called Jones from the cabin.
Then from the door, taking in the situation he yelled,
Hold on, Jim.
Pull down on the armory gold cayuse.
He leaped into action with a lasso in each hand,
one whirling around his head.
The slender rope strengthened with a whiz
and whipped around Baldi's legs
as he kicked viciously.
Jones pulled it tight,
then fastened it with nibble fingers toward the tree.
Let go, look go, Jim.
He yelled, whirling the other lasso.
The lope flashed and fell over Baldi's head
and tightened around his neck.
Jones threw all the weight of his burly form
on the lariat and baldy crashed to the ground rolled tussle screamed and then lay on his back kicking
the air with three free legs hold this ordered jones giving the tight rope to frank whereupon he
grabbed my lasso from the saddle rope baldy's two four feet and pulled him down on his side this lasso he
fastened to a scrub cedar he's joking said frank likely he is replied jones shortly it'll do him good
but with his big hands he drew the coil loose and slipped it down over Baldi's nose,
where he tightened it again.
Now go ahead, he said, taking the rope from Frank.
It had all been done in a twinkling.
Baldi lay there groaning and helpless,
and when Frank once again took hold of the wicked leg,
he was almost passive.
When the shoeing operation had been neatly and quickly attended to
and Baldy released from his uncomfortable position,
he struggled to his feet with heavy breath, shook himself,
and looked at his master.
How'd you like being hog-tied, queried his conqueror, rubbing Baldi's nose.
Now, after this, you'll have some manners.
Old Baldy seemed to understand, for he looked sheepish,
and lapsed once more into his listless, lazy, unconcern.
Where's Jim's old Cayuse, the pack-horse? asked our leader.
Lost, couldn't find him this morning, and had a deuce of a time finding the rest of the bunch.
Old Baldy was cute.
He hid in a bunch of pinions and stood quiet so his bell wouldn't ring.
I'd trail him.
Do the horses stay far away when they're hobbled, inquired Wallace?
If they keep jumping all night, they can cover some territory.
We're now on the edge of the wild horse country,
and our nags know this as well as we.
They smell the Mustangs and would break their necks to get away.
Satan and the Sorrow were ten miles from camp
when I found him this morning.
Jim's Coyus went farther, and we never will get him.
He'll wear his hobbles out, then away with the wild horses.
Once with them, he'll never be caught.
again. On the sixth day of our stay at Oak, we had visitors whom Frank introduced as the
Stewart brothers, and Lawson, wild horse wranglers. They were still dark men, whose facial expressions
seldom varied, tall and lithe and wiry as the Mustangs they rode. The stewards were on the way
back to Canab, Utah, to arrange for the sale of a drope of horses they had captured and
corralled in a narrow canyon back into seawash. Lawson said he was at her service and was promptly
hired to look after our horses.
Any cougar signs back in the bricks?
Asked Jones.
Well, there's a cougar on every deer trail, replied the elder
Stewart, and two for every pinto in the brakes.
Old Tom himself down fifteen colts for us this spring.
Fifteen colts?
That's wholesale murder.
Why don't you kill the butcher?
We've tried more than once.
It's a terrible busted-up country, them brakes.
No man knows it, and the cougars do.
Old Tom ranges all the ridges and brakes even up on the slopes of buckskin,
but he lives down there in them holes,
and Lord knows no dog I ever seen could follow him.
We tracked him in the snow and had dogs after him,
but none could stay with him except two has never come back.
But we've nothing again old Tom like Jeff Clark, a horse rustler,
who has a stirring of pinto's corral north of us.
Clark swears he ain't raised a colt in two years.
We'll put that old cougar up a tree, exclaimed Jones.
If you kill him, we'll make you all a present of a Mustang, and Clark, he'll give you two each, replied Stuart.
We'd be getting rid of him cheap.
How many wild horses are on the mountain now?
Hard to tell. Two or three thousand, maybe.
There's almost no catching them, and they're growing all the time.
We'd had no luck this spring.
A bunch of corral we got last year.
"'Sin' any of thund of the white Mustang?'
"'Quired Frank.
"'Ever get a rope near him?'
"'Nah near we have for six years back.
"'He can't be catched.'
"'We seen him and his band of blacks a few days ago,
"'heading for a waterhole down where Nail Canyon
"'runs into Canab Canyon.
"'He's so cunning, he'll never water at any of our trap corrals.
"'And we believe he can go without water for two weeks
"'unless maybe he's at a secret hole
we never trailed him to.
Would we have any chance to see this,
White Mustang and his band?
Question Jones.
Same?
That'd be easy.
Go down to Snake Gulch camp at singing cliffs,
go over to Nail Canyon, and wait.
Then send some one slipping down to the waterhole at Canab Canyon,
and when the band comes to drink,
which I reckonably in a few days now.
Have them drive the Mustangs up.
Only be sure to have them get ahead of the White Mustang,
so he'll have only one way to come.
come, for he sure is no one. He never makes a mistake. Maybe you'll get to see him come by like
a white streak. Well, I've heard that Mustang's hoofs ring like bells on the rocks mile away.
His hoofs are harder than any iron shoe as ever made. But even he don't get to see him,
snake gullster is worth seeing. I learned later from Stuart that the white Mustang was a beautiful
stallion of the wildest strain of Mustang Blue Blood. He had roamed the long-rength. He had roamed the long
reaches between the Grand Canyon and Buckskin, toward its southern slope for years.
He had been the most sought for a horse by all the wranglers,
and had become so shy and experienced that nothing but a glimpse was ever obtained of him.
A singular fact was he never attached any of his own species to his band,
unless they were coal black.
He had been known to fight and kill other stallions,
but he kept out of the well-wooded and watered country frequented by other bands,
and ranged the brakes of the sea-wish as far as he could range the usual method indeed the only successful way to capture wild horses was to build corrals around the water-holes the wranglers lay out night after night watching
when the mustangs came to drink which was always after dark the gates would be closed on him but the trick had never been tried on the white mustang for the simple reason that he never approached one of the traps boy
said Jones.
Saying we need breaking in,
we'll give the white Mustang a little run.
This was most pleasurable news
for the wild horses fascinated me.
Besides, I saw from the expression
on our leader's face
that an uncapturable Mustang
was an object of interest to him.
Wallace and I had employed
the last few warm, sunny afternoons
in riding up and down the valley below
where there was a fine level stretch.
Here I wore out my soreness of muscle
and gradually overcame my awkwardness in the saddle.
Frank's remedy of maple sugar and red pepper
had rid me of my cold and with the return of strength
and the coming of confidence,
full joyous appreciation of wild environment
and life made me unspeakably happy.
And I noticed that my companions were in like condition of mind,
though self-contained where I was exuberant.
While I galloped to sorrel and watched the crags,
Jones talked more kindly to the dogs,
Jim baked biscuits in defagably,
and smoked in contended silence,
Frank said always,
We lose the long easy-like,
for we've all the time there is,
which sentiment, whether from reiterated suggestion
or increasing confidence in the practical cowboy,
or charm of its free import,
gradually won us all.
Boys, said Jones as we sat around the campfire,
I see you're getting in shape.
Well, I've worn.
off the wire edge myself, and have the hounds coming fine.
They mind me now, but they're mystified.
For the life of them, they can't understand what I mean.
I don't blame them.
Wait till by good luck we get a cougar in a tree.
When Sounder and Don see that, we've lion dogs, boys.
We've lion dogs.
But Moes is a stubborn brute in all my years of animal experience.
I've never discovered any other way to make animals obey than
by instilling fear and respect into their hearts.
I've been fond of buffalo horses and dogs,
but sentiment never ruled me.
When animals must obey, they must, that's all,
and no mockishness.
But I never trusted a buffalo in my life.
If I had, I wouldn't be here tonight.
You all know how many keepers of tame wild animals get killed?
I could tell you dozens of tragedies.
And I've often thought since I got back from New York,
of that woman I saw with her troop of African lions.
I dream about those lions and see them leaping over her head.
What a grand sight that was.
But the public is fooled.
I read somewhere that she trained those lions by love.
I don't believe it.
I saw her use a whip and steel spear.
Moreover, I saw many things that escaped most observers,
how she entered the cage, how she maneuvered among them,
how she kept a compelling gaze on them.
It was an admirable, a great piece of work.
Maybe she loves those huge yellow brutes,
but her life was in danger every moment
while she was in that cage and she knew it.
Someday one of her pets, likely the king of beast,
she pets the most, will rise up and kill her.
That is as certain as death.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
recording by Mike Vendetti.
The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 6
The White Mustang
For 30 miles down Nail Canyon,
we marked in every dusty trail in sandy wash,
the small, oval, sharply defined tracks
of the white Mustang and his band.
The canyon had been well named.
It was long, straight, and square-sided.
Its bare walls glared steel gray in the sun's smooth, glistening surfaces
that had been polished by wind and water.
no weathered heaps of shale no crumbled piles of stone obstructed its level floor and softly toning its drab austerity here grew the white sage waving in the breeze the indian paintbrush with vivid vermilion flower and patches of fresh green grass
the white king as we arizona wildhoss ranglers call this mustang is mighty particular about his feed and he ranged along here last night easy like browsing on the white
sage, said Stuart, infected by an intense interest in the famous Mustang and ruffled slightly by
Jones's manifest surprise and contempt that no one had captured him. Stuart had volunteered to
guide us. Never knowed him to run in this way for water. Fact is, never knowed Nail Canyon hit
a fork. It splits down here, but you'd think it was only a crack in a wall. In that kind of Mustang,
he's been fooling us for years
about this waterhole.
The fork of Nail Canyon,
which Stewart had decided we were in,
had been accidentally discovered by Frank,
who in search of our horses one morning,
had crossed a ridge,
to come suddenly upon the blind, box-like head of the canyon.
Stuart knew the lay of the ridges
and run of the canyons as well as any man
could know a country where seemingly every rod
was ridged and bisective.
And he was of the opinion
that we had stumbled upon one of the white Mustangs secret passages,
by which he had so often eluded his pursuers.
Hard riding had been the order of the day,
but still we covered ten more miles by sundown.
The canyon apparently closed in on us,
so camp was made for the night.
The horses were staked out,
and supper made ready while the shadows were dropping.
And when darkness settled thickovers,
we lay under our blankets.
Morning disclosed the White Mustang's secret passage.
It was a neural colonel.
cliff, splitting the canyon wall, rough, uneven, torturous, and choked with fallen rocks,
no more than a wonderful crack in a solid stone, opening into another canyon.
Above us, the sky seemed a winding, flowering steam of blue.
The walls were so close in places that a horse with pack would have been blocked,
and a rider had to pull his legs up over the saddle.
On the far side, the passage fell very suddenly for several hundred feet to the floor of the other canyon.
No hunter could have seen it or suspected it from that side.
This is Grand Canyon country, and nobody knows what he's going to find, was Frank's comment.
Now we're in Nail Canyon proper, said Stuart.
And on Noma Barrens, I can climb out a mile below and cut across Kanab Canyon and slip up into Nail Canyon again,
ahead of the Mustangs and drive them up.
I can't miss them, for Knaab Canyon is impassable down little ways.
The Mustang will have to run this way.
So all you need to do is go below the break, where I climb out and wait.
You're sure going to get a look at the white Mustang, but wait.
Don't expect him before noon and after that.
Any time till he comes.
Maybe it'll be a couple days, so keep a good watch.
Then taking our man Lawson with blankets and a knapsack of food,
Stuart rode off down the canyon.
We were early on the march.
As we proceeded, the canyon lost its regularity and smoothness.
It became crooked as a rail fence narrower, higher, rugged, and broken.
Pinnacle cliffs cracked and leaning menaced us from above.
Mountains of ruin wall had tumbled into fragments.
It seems that Jones, after much survey of different corners,
angles and points in the canyon floor,
chose his position, with much greater care than appeared necessary
for the ultimate success of her venture,
which was simply to see the white Mustang,
and if good fortune attended us,
to snap some photographs of this wild king of horses.
It flashed over me that with his ruling passion strong within him,
our leader was laying some kind of crap for the Mustang,
was indeed bent on his capture.
Wallace Frank and Jim were stationed at a point below the break
where Stewart had evidently gone up and out.
Oh, a horse could have climbed that,
that streaky wide slide was a mystery.
Jones's instructions to the men were to wait until the Mustangs were close upon them,
and then yell and shout and show themselves.
He took me to a jutting corner of the cliff,
which hid us from the others, and he exercised still more care
in scrutinizing the lay of the ground,
a wash from ten to fifteen feet wide, and as deep,
ran through the canyon in a somewhat meandering course.
At the corner which consumed so much of his attention,
the dry ditch ran along the cliff wall about 50 feet out.
Between it and the wall was good level ground.
On the other side, huge rocks and shale made it hummicky,
practically impassable for a horse.
It was playing the Mustangs on their way up.
We'd choose the inside of the wash,
and here in the middle of the passage,
just around the jutting corner,
Jones tied our horses to good strong bushes.
His next act was significant.
He threw out his lasso and dragging every crook out of it,
carefully recoiled it, and hung it loose over the pommel of his saddle.
The white Mustang may be yours before dark.
He said with a smile that came so seldom.
Now I placed our horses there for two reasons.
The Mustangs won't see them until they're right on them.
Then you'll see a sight, and you'll have a chance for a great picture.
They will halt, the stallion will prance, whistle, and snort.
for a fight, and then they'll see the saddles and be off.
We'll hide across the wash down a little way,
and at the right time we'll shout and yell to drive them up.
By piling stagebrush around a stone, we made a hiding place.
Jones was extremely cautious to arrange the bunches in natural positions.
A Rocky Mountain Big Horn is the only four-footed beast, he said,
that has a better eye than a wild horse.
A cougar has an eye, too.
He's used to lying high up on the cliffs and looking down for his query, so as to stalk it at night.
But even a cougar has to take second to a Mustang when it comes to sight.
The hours passed slowly.
The sun baked us, the stones were too hot to touch, flies buzzed behind our ears,
tarantulas peeped at us from holes.
The afternoon slowly waned.
At dark we returned to where we had left Wallace and the Cowboys.
Frank had solved the problem of water.
supply, for he had found a little spring trickling from a cliff, which by a skillful management
produced enough drink for the horses. We had packed our water for camp use. You take the first
watch tonight, said Jones to me after supper. The Mustangs might try to slip through our fire in
the night, and we must keep a watch for them. Call Wallace when your time's up. Now, fellows, roll in.
When the pink of dawn was shading white,
we were at our posts a long hot day, interminably long.
Deadening to the keenest interest passed, and still no Mustangs came.
We slept and watched again in the grateful cool of night,
till the third day broke.
The hours passed, the cool breeze changed to hot,
the sun blazed over the canyon wall,
the stone scorched, the flies buzzed.
I fell asleep in the scant shade of the sage bushes,
and awoke, stifled and moist.
The old plainsman, never weary, leaned with his back against the stone and watched,
with narrow gaze, the canyon below.
The steely walls hurt my eyes.
The sky was like hot copper.
Though nearly wild with heat and aching bones and muscles
and the long hours of wait, wait, wait,
I was ashamed to complain, for there sat the old man still and silent.
I rotted out a hairy tarantula from under a stone and teased him
into a frenzy with my stick and tried to get up a fight between him and a scalloped-backed horn-toed
that blinked wonderingly on me. Then I espied a green lizard on a stone. Beautiful reptile was
about a foot in length, bright green dotted with red, and he had diamonds for eyes. Nearby,
a purple flower blossomed, delicate and pale, with a bee sucking at its golden heart. I observed
then that the lizard had his jewelled eyes upon the bee. He slipped to the bird. He slipped to
the edge of the stone, flicked out a long red tongue, and tore the insect from its honeyed
perch.
Here were beauty, life, and death.
And I had been weary for something to look at, to think about, to distract me from the
wearisome weight.
Listen, broke in Jones's sharp voice.
His neck was stretched, his eyes were closed, his ear was turned to the wind.
With a thrilling, reawakened eagerness, I strained my hearing.
I caught a faint sound, then lost it.
"'But you're to the ground,' said Jones.
I followed his advice and detected the rhythmic beat of galloping hooves.
"'Mustangs are coming. Sure as you're born,' exclaimed Jones.
"'There. See that cloud of dust?' cried he a minute later.
In the first bend of the canyon below a splintered ruin of rock now lay under a rolling cloud of dust.
White flash appeared a line of bobbing black objects and more dust,
Then with a sharp pounding of hoofs into clear vision shot a dense black band of Mustangs,
and well in front swung the White King.
Look, look, I never saw the beat of that, never in my born days, cried Jones.
How they move, yet that white fellow isn't half stretched out.
Get your picture before they pass.
You'll never see the beat of that.
With long mains and tails flying, the Mustangs came on peace and passed us in a trampling roar.
The white stallion in front, suddenly a shrill whistling blast
on like any sound I have ever heard, made the canyon fairly ring.
The white stallion plunged back, and his band closed in behind him.
He had seen our saddle horses, then trembling, waning, and with arched neck and high-poised head,
bespeaking his metal, he advanced a few paces, and again whistled his shrill note of defiance.
Pure, creamy white he was, and built like a racer.
He pranced, struck his hoof hard and cavorted.
Then, taking sudden fright, he wheeled.
It was then, when the Mustangs were pivoting,
with the white in the lead that Jones jumped upon the stone,
fired his pistol and roared with all his strength,
taking his cue I did likewise.
The band huddled back again, uncertain and frightened,
then broke up the canyon.
Jones jumped the ditch with surprising agility,
and I followed close at his heels.
When we reached our plunging horses, he shouted,
Mountain hold this passage.
Keep close by on that big stone at the,
turned so they can't run you down or stampede you.
If they had your way, scared them back.
Satan quivered, and when I mounted, reared and plunged,
I had to hold him in hard, for he was eager to run.
At the cliff wall, I was at some pains to check him.
He kept champing his bit and stamping his feet.
From my post, I could see the Mustangs flying before a cloud of dust.
Jones was turning in his horse behind a large rock in the middle of the canyon,
where he evidently intended to hide.
Presently, successive yells and shots for Mark Homrads
blended in the roar with the narrow box canyon,
augmented and echoed from wall to wall.
High, the white Mustang reared,
and above the roar whistled his snort of furious terror.
His band wheeled with him and charged back
through hooves ringing like hammers on iron.
The crafty old buffalo hunter had hemmed the Mustangs in a circle
and had left himself free in the center.
It was a wily trick,
born of his quick mind and experienced eye.
The stallion, closely crowded by his followers, moved swiftly.
I saw that he must pass near the stone,
thundering, crashing, the horses came on.
Away beyond them I saw Frank and Wallace.
Then Jones yelled to me,
Open up, open up.
I turned Satan into the middle of the narrow passage,
screaming at the top of my voice,
and discharging my revolver rapidly.
But the wild horses thundered on,
Jones saw that they would not be balked, and he spurred his big bay directly in her path.
The big horse, courageous as his intrepid master, dove forward.
Then followed confusion for me.
The pound of hoofs, the snorts of screaming neigh, that was frightful,
the mad stampede of the Mustangs with a whirling cloud of dust,
bewildered and frightened me so that I lost sight of Jones.
Danger threatened and passed me almost before I was aware of it.
out of the dust a mass of tossing manes foam-flecked black horses wild eyes and lifting hoof rushed at me satan the presence of mind that shamed mine leaped back and hugged the wall my eyes were blinded by dust the smell of dust choked me
i felt a strong rush of wind and a mustang grazed my stirrup then they had passed on the wings of the dust-laden breeze but not all for i saw that jones had in some inexplicable manner
cut the white Mustang and two of his blacks out of the band.
He had turned them back again and was pursuing them.
The bay he rode had never before appeared to much advantage,
and now, with his long, lean, powerful body in splendid action,
imbued with the relentless will of his rider,
what a picture he presented.
How he did run.
With all that, the white Mustang made him look dingy and slow.
Nevertheless, it was a critical time in the wild career of that king of horses.
He had been pinned in a space 200 by 500 yards,
half of which was separated from him
by a wide ditch, a yawning chasm
that he had refused,
and behind him, always keeping on the inside,
wheeled the yelling hunter,
who savagely spurred his bay and whirled a deadly lasso.
He had been cut off and surrounded.
The very nature of the rocks and trails of the canyon
threatened to end his freedom or his life.
certain it was he preferred to end the ladder,
for he risked death from the rocks as he went over them in long leaps.
Jones could have roped either of the two blacks,
but he hardly noticed him.
Covered with dust and splotches of foam,
they took their advantage, turned in a circle toward the passageway,
and galloped by me out of sight.
Again, Wallace, Frank, and Jim,
led out strings of yells and volleys.
The chase was narrowing down, trapped.
The white Mustang king had no chance.
what a grand spirit he showed frenzied as i was with excitement the thought occurred to me that this was an unfair battle that i ought to stand aside and let him pass but the blood and lust of primitive instinct held me fast
jones keeping back met his every turn yet always with the lithe and beautiful stride the stallion kept out of reach of the whirling lariat close in yelled jones with his voice powerful with a note of triumph bespoke the knell of the knell of the
of the king's freedom.
The trap closed in, back and forth at the upper end.
The white Mustang worked, then rendered desperate.
By the closing end, he circled round nearer to me.
Fire shone in his wild eyes.
The Wiley Jones was not to be outwitted.
He kept in the middle, always on the move,
and he yelled to me to open up.
I lost my voice again and fired my last shot.
Then the Mustang burst into a dash of daring, despairing speed.
It was his last magnificent effort,
straight for the wash at the upper end.
He pointed his racy-spirited head,
and his white legs stretched far apart,
twinkled and stretched again.
Jones galloped to cut him off,
and the yells he admitted were demonical.
It was a long, straight race for the Mustang,
a short curve for the bay,
that the white stallion gained was as sure
as his resolve to elude capture,
and he never swerved a foot from his course.
Jones might have headed him,
but manifestly he wanted to ride with him
as well as to meet him.
so in case the lassoe went through,
a terrible shock might be averted.
Up went Jones's arm as the space shortened,
and the lasso rained his head.
Out its shot, lengthened like a yellow, striking snake,
and fell just short of the flying white tail.
The white Mustang, fulfilling his purpose
in his last heroic display of power,
sailed into the air up and up and over the wide wash
like a white streak, free.
The dust rolled in a cloud from under his,
his hooves and he vanished.
Jones's superb horse crashing down on his haunches
just escaped sliding into the hole.
I awoke to the realization that Satan had carried me
in pursuit of the thrilling chase
all the way across the circle without mine knowing it.
Jones calmly wiped sweat from his face,
calmly coiled his lassoe, and calmly remarked,
in trying to capture wild animals,
a man must never be too sure.
Now what I thought my strong point was my weak point, the wash.
I made sure no horse could ever jump that hole.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, recording by Mike Vendetti.
The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 7.
Snake Gulch
Not far from the scene of our adventures with the white streak,
as we facetiously and appreciatively named the must-deaf,
a deep flat cave indented the canyon wall.
By reason of its sandy floor in close proximity to Frank's trickling spring,
we decided to camp in it,
about dark Lawson and Stewart straggled in on spent horses,
and found awaiting them a bright fire, a hot supper, and cheery comrades.
"'De far get to see him?'
was the tall ranger's first question.
"'Did we get to see him?' echoed five lusty voices as one.
We did.
It was after Frank and his plain blunt speech had told of our experience
that the long, Arizonan gaze fixedly at Jones.
Did you actually touch the hair on that Mustang with a rope?
In all his days, Jones never had a greater compliment.
By way of reply, he moved his big hand to a button of his coat
and fumbling over it unwound a string of long white hairs.
then said,
I'll pull these out of his tail with molasses.
I missed his left hind foot about six inches.
There were six of the hairs, pure, glistening white,
and over three feet long.
Stewart examined them in expressive silence,
then passed them along.
And when they reached me, they stayed.
The cave, lighted up by a blazing fire,
appeared to me a forbidding, uncanny place.
Small, peculiar round holes and dark cracks,
suggestive of hidden vermin,
gave me a creepy feeling,
and although not oversensitive
on the subject of crawling, creeping things,
a voice my disgust.
Say, I don't like the idea of sleeping in this hole.
I'll bet it's full of spider snakes and centipedes
and other poisonous things.
Whatever there was in my inoffensive declaration
to rouse the usually slumbering humor
of the Arizonans
and the thinly veiled ridicule of Colonel Jones
and a mixture of both in my once loyal California friend.
I am not prepared to state.
Maybe it was the dry, sweet, cool air of Nail Canyon,
maybe my suggestion will ticklish association
that worked themselves off thus.
Maybe it was the first instance of my committing myself
to a breach of camp etiquette.
Be that what it may,
my innocently expressed sentiment gave rise to bewildering
dissertations on entomology.
And most remarkable and startling
tales from firsthand experience.
Like as not, began Frank in matter-of-fact tone.
Them's taranturer holes all right, and scorpions, centipedes, and rattlers always rustled
with tarantulas.
But we never mind them, not us fellers.
We're used to sleeping with them.
Why often wake up in the night and see a big tarantula on my chest and see him wink?
Ain't that so, Jim?
Sure as hell, drawled faithful, sloth.
Oh, Jim. Reminds me of how fatal the bite of a centipede is, took up Colonel Jones complacently.
Once I was sitting in camp with a hunter who suddenly hissed out, Jones, for God's sake,
don't budge. There's a centipede on your arm. He pulled his colt and shot the blame centipede
off as clean as the whistle. But the bullet hit a steer on the leg and, would you believe it,
the bullet carried so much poison that in less than two hours the steer died.
of blood poisoning.
Centipedes are so poisoning,
they leave a blue trail on flesh
just by crawling over it.
Look there.
He buried his arm,
and there on the brown corded flesh
was a blue trail of something
and was certain.
It might have been made by a centipede.
This is a likely place for them,
put in Wallace,
emitting a volume of smoke
and gazing around the cave walls
with the eyes of a connoisseur.
My archaeological pursuits have given me great experience with centipedes, as you may imagine,
considering how many old tombs, caves, and cliff dwellings I've explored.
This Algonquin rock is about the right stratum for centipedes to dig in.
Dig somewhat after the manner of the fluid-filled long-tailedic crustacations of the Genoa thermococata,
the common cryfish, you know.
From that, of course, you can imagine if a centipede can bite rock,
What a fighter he is.
I began to grow weak and did not wonder to see Jim's long pipe fall from his lips.
Frank looked queer around the gills, so to speak, but the Gaunt Stewart never better than I.
I can't hear two years ago, he said, and the cave was alive with rock rats, mice, snakes, horn toads, lizards, and a big geel monster.
Besides, bugged scorpion rattlers, and as for tarantlers, and centipers,
they couldn't sleep for the noise they made fighting.
I seen the same, concluded Lawson as nonchalant as a wild horse wrangler well could be.
And as for me, now I always lay perfectly still when the centipedes and taranclers begin to drop
down from their holes in the roof, same as them holes up there.
And when they light on me, I'll never move, nor even breathe for about five minutes.
Then they take a notion I'm dead and crawl off.
But sure, if I'd breathe, I'd be a goner.
All of this was playfully intended for the extinction
of an unoffending and impressionable tenderfoot.
With an admiring glance at my tormentors,
I rolled out my sleeping bag and crawled into it,
vowing I would remain there even if devilfish armed with pikes,
invaded our cave.
Late in the night I awoke.
The bottom of the canyon and the under the underline,
The outer floor of our cave lay bathed in white, clear moonlight.
A dense, gloomy black shadow veiled the opposite canyon wall.
High up the pinnacles and turrets pointed toward a resplendent moon.
It was a weird, wonderful scene of beauty, entrancing of breathless, dreaming silence
that seemed not of life.
Then Hurau lamented dismally his call fitting the scene and the dead stillness.
The echoes resounded from cliff to cliff, strangely mocking and hollow, at last, reverberating
low and mournful in the distance.
How long I lay there and raptured with the beauty of light and mystery of shade, thrilling
at the lonesome lament of the owl, I have no means to tell.
But I was awakened from my trance by the touch of something crawling over me.
Probably I raised my head.
The cave was as light as day.
There, sitting sociably on my sleeping bag, was a great black tarantula, as large as my hand.
For one still moment, notwithstanding my contempt for Lawson's advice, I certainly acted upon it to the letter.
If ever I was quiet, and if ever I was cold, the time was then.
My companions snored in blissful ignorance of my plight.
Slight rustling sounds attracted my wary grays from the old black sentinel on my knee.
I saw other black spiders running to and fro on the silver sandy floor.
A giant as large as a soft shell crabbed seemed to be meditating an assault upon Jones's ear.
Another grizzled and shiny with age or moonbeams, I cannot tell, which pushed long,
tentative feelers into Wallace's cap.
I saw black spots darting over the floor.
It was not a green. The cave was alive with tarantulas.
Not improbably my strong impression that the spider on my knee deliberately winked at me
was the result of memory enlivening imagination, but it suffice to bring to mind in one rapid,
consoling flash, the irrevocable law of destiny, that the deeds of the wicked return unto them
again.
I slipped back into my sleeping bag with a keen consciousness of its nature, and carefully pulled
the flap in place, which almost hermitage.
sealed me up.
Hey, Jones, Wallace, Frank, Jim,
I yelled from the depths of my safe refuge.
Wondering cries gave me glad assurance
that they had awakened from their dreams.
The cave's alive with tarantulas,
I cried, trying to hide my unholy glee.
I'll be darned if an eight, ejaculated Frank.
Short beats hell, added Jim, with a shake of his blanket.
Look out, Jones, there's one on your pillow,
shouted Wallace.
Whack, sharp blow proclaimed the opening of hostilities.
memory stamped indelibly every word of the incident but innate delicacy prevents a repetition of all save the old warriors concluding remarks police saw i was ever in torrentioles by the million centipede scorpions bats rattlesnakes too
houseware look out wallace there under your blanket from the shuffling sounds which waved sweetly into my bed i gathered that my long friend from california must have gone through motions credible to a contortionist an ensuing explosion
from Jones proclaimed to the listening world
that Wallace had thrown a tarantula upon him.
Further fearful language suggested
the thought that Colonel Jones
had passed on the inquisitive spider to Frank.
The reception accorded the unfortunate tarantula.
No doubt scared out of his wits,
began with a wild yell from Frank
and ended up in pandemonium.
While the confusion kept up with wax and blows
and threshing about,
with language such as never before
had disgraced a group of old campers,
I choked with rapture and reveled in the sweetness of revenge.
When Cawaiad regained once more in the black and white canyon,
only one sleeper lay on the moon-silbered sand of the cave.
At dawn when I opened my sleepy eyes, Frank, Jim, Stewart, and Lawson,
had departed as pre-arranged with the outfit,
leaving the horses belonging to us and rations for the day.
Wallace and I wanted to climb the divide at the break
and go home by way of snake gulch,
the Colonel acquiesced, with the remark that his 63 years had taught him, there was much to see
in the world. Coming to undertake it, we found the climb except for a slide of weathered rock,
no great task, and we accomplished it in half an hour, with breath to spare and no mishap to horses.
But descending into snake gulch, which was only a mile across the sparsely cedared ridge,
proved to be tedious labor. By virtue of Satan's patience and skill, I for
forged ahead. Which advantage, however, meant more risk for me because of the stones set in motion
above. They rolled and bumped and cut into me, and I sustained many a bruise trying to protect
the sinewy slender legs of my horse. The descent ended without serious mishap. Snake Gulch had a
character and sublimity which cast Nail Canyon into the obscurity of forgetfulness. The great
contrast lay in the diversity of structure. The rock was bright red with parapet of yellow that leaned
heaved and bulged outward. They emblazoned cliff walls 2,000 feet high, were cracked from turret to base.
They bowled out at such an angle that we were afraid to ride under them. Mountains of yellow rock
hung balanced, ready to tumble down at the first angry breath of the gods. We rode among carved stones,
pillars, obelisks, and sculptured ruined walls of a fallen Babylon.
Slides reaching all the way across and far up the canyon walls obstructed our passage.
On every stone's silent green lizards sunned themselves, gliding swiftly as we came near
to their marble homes.
We came into a region of wind-blown caves, of all sizes and shapes high and low on the cliffs.
But strange to say, only on the north side of the canyon, they appeared with dark mouths open,
and uninviting, one vast and deep, though far off,
menaced us as might the cave of a tawny main king of beasts,
yet it impelled, fascinated, and drew us on.
It's a long, hard climb, said Wallace to the colonel as we dismounted.
Boys, I'm with you, came the reply,
and he was with us all the way as we clambered over the immense blocks,
then threaded a passage between them and pulled weird.
legs up, one after the other, so steep lay the jumble of cliff fragments that we lost sight
of the cave long before we got near it. Suddenly we rounded a stone to halt and gasp at the
thing looming before us. The dark portal of death or hell might have yawned there. A gloomy hole,
large enough to admit a church, had been hollowed in the cliff by ages of nature's chisling.
Vast sepulchre of times past,
Give up thy dead, cried Wallace solemnly.
Oh, dark, stikin cave forlorn, quoted I,
as feeling as my friend.
Jones hauled us down from the clouds.
Now wonder what kind of prehistoric animal hold in here, said he.
Forever, the one absorbing interest.
If he realized the sublinity of this place, he did not show it.
The floor of the cave ascended from the very threshold.
Stony ridges circled from wall to wall.
We climbed till we were 200 feet from the opening,
yet we were not halfway to the dome.
Our horses browsing in the sage far below looked like ants.
So steep did the ascent become that we desisted,
for if one of us had slipped on the smooth incline,
the result would have been terrible.
Our voices ran clear and hollowed from the walls.
We were so high that the sky was blotted out by the overhanging square,
corners like top of the door,
and the light was weird, dim, shadow of opaque.
It was a gray tomb.
Wahoo!
yelled Jones with all the power of his wide, leathery lungs.
Thousands of devilish voices rushed at us,
seemingly on puffs of winds, mocking, deep echoed,
bellowed from the ebon, shades at the back of the cave,
and the walls taking them up, hurled them on again, in faintish conventation.
We did not again break the silence of that tomb, where the spirits of ages lay in dusty shrouds,
and we crawled down as if we had invaded a sanctuary and invoked the wrath of the gods.
We all proposed names, Montezuma's amphitheater, being the only rival of Jones's selection, Echo Cave,
which we finally chose.
Mounting our horses again, we made 20 miles of snake gulch by noon when we rested for lunch.
All the way up we had played the boy's game of spying for sights, with the honors about even.
It was a question if snake gulch ever before had such a raking over.
Despite its name, however, we discovered no snakes.
From the sandy niche of a cliff where we launched Wallace despied a tomb,
and heralded his discovery with a victorious whoop.
Digging in old ruins roused in him much the same spirit that digging in old books roused in me.
Before we reached him, he had a big bowie knife buried deep in the red sandy floor of the tomb.
This one-time sealed house of the dead had been constructed of small stones,
held together by a cement, the nature of which Wallace explained had never become clear to civilization.
It was red in color and hard as flint, harder than the rocks it glued.
together. The tomb was half round in shape and its floor was a projecting shelf of cliff rock.
Wallace unearthed bits of pottery, bone, and finely braided rope, all of which to our great
disappointment crumbled to dust in our fingers. In the case of the rope, Wallace assured us
this was a sign of remarkable antiquity. In the next mile we traversed, we found dozens of these
old cells, all demolished except for a few feet of the walls, all despoiled of their one-time
possessions. Wallace thought these depredations were due to Indians of our own time.
Suddenly we came upon Jones, standing under a cliff with his neck crane to a desperate ankle.
Now what's that? demanded he, pointing upward. High on the cliff wall appeared a small round
protuberance. It was of the unmistakably red color of the other tombs, and Wallace, more excited than
he had been in the cougar chase, said it was a sepulchre, and he believed it had never been
opened. From an elevated point of rock as high up as I could well climb, I decided both
questions with my glass. The tomb resembled nothing so much as a mud wasp's nest, high on a
barn wall. The fact that it had never been broken open quite carried Wallace away with
enthusiasm. This is no mean discovery, let me tell you that, he declared. I am familiar with
the Aztec, Toltec, and Pueblo ruins, and here I find no one.
similarity. Besides, we are out of their latitude. An ancient race of people, very ancient indeed,
lived in this canyon. How long ago, it is impossible to tell. There must have been birds,
said the practical Jones. Now how'd that tomb get there? Look at it, will you? As near as we could
ascertain, it was 300 feet from the ground below, 500 from the rim wall above, and could not possibly
have been approached from the top. Moreover, the cliff wall,
was as smooth as a wall of human make.
There's another one, called out Jones.
Yes, and I see another.
No doubt there are many of them, replied Wallace.
In my mind, only one thing possible accounts for their position.
You observe they appear to be about level with each other.
Well, once the canyon floor ran along that line,
and in the ages gone by, it is lowered, washed away by the reins.
This conception staggered us,
but it was the only one conceivable.
No doubt we all thought at the same time
of the little rainfall in that arid section of Arizona.
How many years?
Quarry Jones.
Years.
What are years, said Wallace.
Thousands of years, ages have passed since the race who built these tombs lived.
Some persuasion was necessary to drag our scientific friend from the spot.
We're obviously helpless to do anything else.
He stood and gazed longingly at the isolated tombs.
The canyon widened as we proceeded, and hundreds of points that invited inspections such as
overhanging shelves of rock, dark fissures, caverns, and ruins had to be passed by, for lack of time.
Still more interesting and important discovery was to come, and the pleasure and honor but fell to me.
My eyes were sharp and peculiarly far-sighted.
The Indian site, Jones assured me, and I kept them searching the walls in such places as my companions overlooked.
presently under a large bulging bluff, I saw a dark spot which took the shape of a figure.
This figure I recollected had been presented to my sight more than once, and now it stopped me.
The hard climb of the slippery stones was fatiguing, but I did not hesitate, for I was determined
to know. Once upon the ledge I let out a yell that quickly set my companions in my direction.
The figure I had seen was a dark red devil, a painted image, rude, unspeaking.
wild, crudely executed, but painted by the hand of man.
The whole surface of the cliff wall bore figures.
Of all shapes, men, animals, birds, and strange devices,
some in red paint, mostly in yellow.
Some showed the wear of time, others were clear and sharp.
Wallace puffed up to me, but he had wind enough left for another whoop.
Jones puffed up also, and seeing the first thing a rude sketch of what might have been a deer or buffalo,
he commented thus.
Dern me if I ever saw an animal like that.
Boys, this is a fine, sure as you're born.
Because not even the pioots ever spoke of these figures.
I doubt if they know they're here.
And the cowboys and wranglers, what few ever get here in a hundred years,
never saw these things.
Beats anything I ever saw in the McKenzie or anywhere else.
The meaning of some devices was as mystical as that of others was clear.
Two blood-red figures of men,
the larger dragging the smaller by the hair,
while he waved aloft a blood-red hatch at her club left little to conjecture.
Here was the old battle of men as old as life.
Another group, two figures of which resembled the foregoing and form in action,
battling over a prostate form, rudely feminine in outline,
attested to an age when men were as susceptible as they are in modern times,
but more forceful and original.
An odd yellow Indian waved aloft of red hand,
which striking picture suggested the idea that he was an ancient Macbeth,
listening to the knocking at the gate.
There was a character representing a great chief
before whom many figures lay prostrate,
evidently slain or subjugated.
Large red paintings in the shape of bats occupied prominent positions
and must have represented gods or devils.
Armies of marching men told of that blight of nations, old or young, war.
These and birds, unnameable and beasts unclassifiable,
with dots and marks and hieroglyphics,
recorded the history of a bygone people.
Symbols, they were of an era that had gone into the dim past,
leaving only these marks, forever unintelligible.
Yet while they stood, century after century,
any feasible reminders of the glory, the mystery, the sadness of life.
How could pain of any kind last so long? asked Joan, shaking his head doubtfully.
That is the unsolvable mystery, returned Wallace.
But the records are there.
I am absolutely sure the paintings are at least a thousand years old.
I have never seen any tombs or paintings similar to them.
Snake gulch is a find, and I shall someday study its wonders.
Sundown caught us within sight of Oak Spring,
and we soon trotted into camp to the welcoming chorus of the hounds.
Frank and the others had reached the cabin some hours before.
Supper was steaming on the hot coals with a delicious fragrance.
Then came the pleasantest.
time of the day. After long chaser jaunt to silent moments, watching the glowing embers of the fire,
the speaking moments when a red-blooded story rang clear and true, the twilight moments, when the wood-smokes
smell sweet. Joan seemed unusually thoughtful. I had learned that this preoccupation in him meant
the stirring of old associations, and I waited silently. By and by, Lawson snored mildly in a corner,
Jim and Frank crawled into their blankets, and all was still.
Wallace smoked his Indian pipe and hunted in firelight dreams.
"'Boys,' said our leader finally,
"'somehow the echoes dying away in that cave
"'reminded me of the mourn of the big white wolves in the barren lands.
"'Wallace puffed huge clouds of white smoke,
"'and I waited, knowing that I was to hear at last
"'the story of the Colonel's great adventure in the Northland.
"' End of Chapter 7.
"'Chapter 8 of the Last of the Plainsman,
by Zane Gray. This Libravox recording is in the public domain, recording by Mike Vendetti,
Mike Vendetti.com. The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 8. Naza, Naza, Naza.
It was a waiting day at Fort Chippewyne. The lonesome far northern Hudson Bay trading post
seldom saw such life. Teepees dotted the banks of the slave river, and lines of blacketed
Indians paraded its shores. Near the boat landing, a group of chiefs,
grotesque and semi-baric, semi-civilized splendor,
but black-browed austere-eyed stood in savage dignity
with folded arms and high-held heads.
Lounging on the grassy bank were white men, traders, trappers,
and officials of the post.
All eyes were on the distant curve of the river,
where, as it lost itself in a fine French bend of dark green,
white glinting waves danced and fluttered.
A June sky lay blue in the majestic stream,
Ragged spear-top, dense green trees massed down to the water,
beyond rose-bold, bald-knobbed hills in remote purple relief.
Long Indian arms stretched south.
The waiting eyes discerned a black speck on the green and watched it grow,
a flatboat, with a man standing to the oars, bore down swiftly.
Not a red hand, nor a white one, offered to help the voyager in the difficult landing.
The oblong, clumsy, heavily-lated boat surged,
the current and passed the dock despite the boatman's efforts.
He swung his craft in below upon a bar and roped it fast to a tree.
The Indians crowded above him on the bank.
The boatman raised his powerful form erect, lifted a bronze face,
which seemed setting craggy hardness,
and cast from narrow eyes a keen cool glance on those above.
The silvery gleam in his hair told of years.
Silence, impressive as it was ominous,
only to the rattle of camping paraphernalia, which the voyage threw to a level grassy bench
on the bank. Evidently, this unwelcome visitor had journeyed from afar, and his boat sucked
deep into the water with its load of barrels, boxes, and bags, indicated that the journey had
only begun. Significant, too, were a couple of long Winchester rifles, shining on a tarpaulin.
Cold-faced crowd stirred and parted to permit the passage of a tall, thin, gray personage of
official bearing in a faded military coat.
Are you the muskawks hunter?
He asked in tones that contained no welcome.
The boatman greeted this preemptory interlocular
with a cool laugh, a strange laugh,
in which the muscles of his face appeared not to play.
Yes, I am that man, he said.
The chiefs of the Chippewaian and great slave tribes
have been apprised of your coming.
They have held counsel and are here to speak with you.
At a motion from the commandant, the line of chieftains piled down to the level bench and formed a half-circle before the voyager,
to a man who had stood before grim sitting bull and noble black thunder of the Sioux, and faced the falconied Geronimo,
and glanced over the sights of a rifle at gorges feathered, wild-free Comanches.
This semicircle of savage is Lords of the North was a sorry comparison.
be dobbled and betrinketed slouchy and slovenly,
these low-statured chiefs belied in appearance their scorn-bright eyes in lofty mane.
They made a sad group.
One who spoke in unintelligible language rolled out a haughty sonorous voice
over the listening multitude,
when he had finished a half-breed interpreter
in the dress of a white man spoke at a signal from the commandant.
He says, listen to the great orator of the Chippewyuan.
He has summoned all the chiefs of the tribes south of Great Slave Lake.
He has held counsel.
The cunning of the pale face, who comes to take the musk oxen, is well known.
Let the paleface hunter return to his own hunting grounds.
Let him turn his face from the north.
Never will the chiefs permit the white man to take musk oxen alive from their country.
The agateer, the musk ox, is their god.
He gives them food and fur.
He will never come back if he is taken away, and the reindeer will follow him.
The chiefs and their people would starve.
They command the pale-faced hunter to go back.
They cry, Naza, Naza, Naza.
Say for a thousand miles, I've heard that word Naza, returned the hunter,
with mingled, curiosity, and disgust.
At Edmonton, Indian runners start ahead of me,
and every village I struck the redskins would crowd around me,
and an old chief would harang at me,
and motioned me back and point north with Naza.
"'Naza, Naza. What does it mean?'
"'No white man knows. No Indian will tell,' answered the interpreter.
"'The traders think it means the great slave, the North Star, the North Spirit, the North Wind,
the North Lights, and Agatir, the Musk-Ox God.'
"'Well, say to the Chiefs, to tell Agatir I have been four moons on the way after some of his little Agateers,
and I'm going to keep on after them. Hunter, you are most unwise,' broke in the commandantyre,
in his officious voice,
the Indians will never permit you
to take a musk ox alive from the north.
They worship him, pray to him.
It is a wonder you have not been stopped.
Who will stop me?
The Indians, they will kill you if you do not turn back.
Fah!
To tell an American plainsman that,
the hunter paused a steady moment
with his eyelids narrowing over slits of blue fire.
There is no law to keep me out.
Nothing but Indian superstition and the greed of the Hudson Bay people.
And I am an old fox, not to be fooled by petty baits.
For years the officer of this fur trading company have tried to keep out explorers.
Even Sir John Franklin and Englishmen could not buy food of them.
The policy of the company is to side with the Indians, to keep the out traders and trappers.
Why?
So they can keep on cheating the poor savages out of clothing and food.
by trading a few trinkets and blankets,
little tobacco and rum for millions of dollars worth of furs.
Have I failed to hire a man after man, Indian after Indian,
not to know why I can not get a helper?
Have I, a plainsman?
Come a thousand miles alone to be scared by you,
or a lot of craven Indians?
Have I been dreaming of musk oxen for forty years to slink south now?
When I begin to feel the north, not I.
Deliberately, every chief with the sound of a hissing snake spat in the hunter's face.
He stood immovable while they perpetrated the outrage, then calmly wiped his cheeks,
and in his strange, cool voice, addressed the interpreter.
Tell them thus they show their true qualities to insult in counsel.
Tell them they are not chiefs but dogs.
Tell them they are not even squaws.
Only poor, miserable, starved dogs.
Tell them I turn my back on them.
Tell them the pale face has fought real chiefs, fierce, bold, like eagles,
and he turns his back on dogs.
Tell them he is the one who could teach them to raise the muskocks and the reindeer
and to keep out the cold and the wolf, but they're blinded.
Tell them the hunter goes north.
Through the council of chiefs ran a low mutter as of gathering thunder.
To his word, the hunter turned his back on them.
As he brushed by, his eye caught a gaunt savage slipping from the boat.
At the hunter's turn call, the Indian leaped ashore, start to run.
It stole a parcel.
It would have succeeded in looting its owner, but for an unforeseen obstacle,
as striking as it was unexpected.
A white man of colossal stature had stepped in the chief's passage,
and laid two great hands on him.
Instantly the parcel flew from the Indian,
and he spun in the air to fall into the river with a sounding splash.
Yell signaled the surprise and alarm caused by this unexpected incident.
The Indian frantically swam to the shore,
whereupon the champion of the stranger in a strange land lifted a bag,
which gave forth a musical clink of steel,
and throwing it with the camp articles on the grassy bench.
He extended a huge friendly hand.
"'My name is Rhea,' he said in a deep cavernous toins.
mine is jones replied the hunter and right quickly did he grasp a for forlifford hand he saw in rhea a giant of whom he was but a stunted shadow six and a half-half feet ria stood
with yard-wide shoulders a bulk of bone and brawn.
His ponderous shaggy head rested on a bull neck,
his broad face with its low forehead,
its close-shut mastiff under jaw,
its big opaque eyes, pale and cruel as those of a jaguar,
marked him a man of terrible brute force.
Free traitor, called the commandant.
Better think twice before you join fortunes with the musk ox-hunter.
"'The hell with you and your ranting dog-eared redskins,' cried Rhea.
"'I've run again a man of my own kind, a man of my own country, and I'm going with him.'
With this he thrust aside some encroaching, gaping Indians, so unconcernedly and ungentlely
that they sprawled upon the grass.
Slowly the crowd mounted and once more lined the bank.
Jones realized that by some late-turning stroke of fortune,
he had fallen in with one of the few free traders in the province.
These free traders from the very nature of their calling,
which was to defy the fur company and to trap and trade on their own account,
were a hearty and intrepid class of men.
Ray's worth to Jones exceeded that of a dozen ordinary men.
He knew the ways of the North, the language of the tribes,
the habits of the animals, the handling of dogs,
and uses of food and fuel.
Moreover, it soon appeared that he was a carpenter and blacksmith.
There my kit, he said, dumping the contents of his bag.
It consisted of a bunch of steel traps and tools of broken axe,
a box of miscellaneous things such as trappers use,
and a few articles of flannel.
Thieving redskins?
He added in explanation of his poverty.
Not much of an outfit, but I'm the man for you.
Besides, I had a pal once to knew you on the plains.
Call you buff, Jones.
Old Jim Brent he was.
I recollect Jim, said Jones.
He went down in Custer's last charged.
So you were Jim's pal.
That'd be a recommendation, if you needed one.
But the way you tucked that Indian overboard got me.
Ray soon manifested himself as a man of few words and much action.
With the planks Jones had on board,
he heightened the stern and bow of the boat
to keep out the beating waves in the rapids.
He fashioned a steering gear
and a less awkward set of oars
and shifted the cargo so as to make
more room in the craft.
Buff, we're in for a storm.
Set up a tarpaulin and make a fire.
We'll pretend to camp tonight.
Those Indians won't dream we'd try to run the river after dark,
and we'll slip by under cover.
The sun glazed over,
clouds moved up from the north.
The cold wind swept the tips of the spruces,
and rain commenced the drive-in gusts.
By the time it was dark,
not an Indian showed himself.
They were housed from the storm.
Lights twinkled in the tipies and the big log cabins of the trading company.
Jones scouted round till a pitchy black night,
then a freezing, pouring blast sent him back to the protection of the toperlin.
When he got there he found that Ray had taken it down and waited him.
Off, said the free trader, and with no more noise than a drifting feather,
the boat sprung into the current and glided down,
till the twinkling fires no longer accentuated the darkness.
By night the river, in common with all swift rivers,
had a sullen voice,
and murmured its hurry, its restraint,
its minutes, its meaning.
The two boatmen, one at the steering gear, one of the oars,
faced the pelting rain and watched the dim, dark line of trees.
The craft slid noiselessly, onward into the gloom.
And into Jones's ears above the storm poured another sound,
a steady, muffled rumble, like a roll of giant chariot wheels.
It had come to be a familiar roar to him,
and the only thing which in his long life of hazard
had ever sent the cold, prickling, tight shudder
over his warm skin.
Many times on the Amisbanka,
that rumble had pre-staged the dangerous and dreaded rapids.
"'Hell Ben Rapids!' shouted Ray.
"'Bad water, but no rocks.'
The rumble expanded,
to a roar, the roar to a boom, that charged the air with heaviness, with a dreamy burr.
The whole indistinct world appeared to be moving to the lash of wind, to the sound of rain,
to the roar of the river, the boat shot down and sailed in loft, met shock on shock,
rested leaping dim white waves and in a hollow, unearthly blend of watery sounds,
rode on and on, buffeted, tossed, pitched into a black chaos, and yet gleamed with the obscure
shrouds of light, then the convulsive stream shrieked out a last defiance, changed its course
abruptly to slow down and drown the sound of rapids in muffling distance. Once more, the craft
swept on smoothly to the drive of the wind and rush of the rain. By midnight the storm cleared,
murky clouds split to show shiny blue-white stars and a fitful moon that silvered the crests
of the truceus and sometimes hid like a gleaming black-threaded pearl behind the dark
branches. Jones, a plainsman, all his days, wonderingly watched the moon blanched water.
He saw it shade and darken under shadowy walls of granite where it swelled with hollow song and
gurgle. He heard again the far-off rumble, faint on the night wind, high cliff banks
appeared, walled out the mellow light, and the river suddenly narrowed, yawning holes, whirlpools
of a second, opened with a gurgling suck, and raced with the boat.
On the craft flew, far ahead, a long declining plain of jumping frosted waves, played dark and white with the moonbeams.
The slave plunged to his freedom down his river, stone-spiked bed, knowing no patient eddy,
and white wreathed his dark, shiny rocks in spume and spray.
End of Chapter 8
Chapter 9 of the Last of the Planesman by Zane Gray.
This Librevox recording is in the podcast.
Public domain, recording by Mike Vendetti,
Mike Vindetti.com,
the last of the plainsman by Zane Gray,
Chapter 9.
The Land of the Musk Ox.
A far cry it was from bright June at Port Chip-Awyan
to dim October on Great Slave Lake.
Too long laborious months,
Ray and Jones threaded the crooked shores
of the great inland sea
to halt at the extreme northern end,
where a plunging outlet formed the source of a river.
Here they found a stone chimney and fireplace
standing among the darkened decayed ruins of a cabin.
We mustn't lose no time, said Ray.
I feel the winter and the wind,
and see how dark the days are getting on us.
On front and musk-oxen, replied Jones.
Man, we're facing the northern night.
We're in the land of the midnight sign.
Soon we'll be shut in for seven months,
a cabin we want, wood, and meat.
A forest of stunted spruce trees edged on the lake,
and soon its dreary solitudes ran,
to the strokes of axes.
The trees were small and uniform in size.
Black stumps protruded here and there from the ground,
showing work of the steel in time gone by.
Jones observed that the living trees were no larger in diameter
than the stumps and questioned rare
in regard to the difference in age.
Cut twenty-five, maybe fifty years ago, said the trapper.
But the living trees are no bigger.
Trees and things don't grow fast in Northland.
They erected a fifteen-foot cabin around,
stone chimney, roofed it with poles and branches of spruce and a layer of sand.
In digging near the fireplace, Jones unearthed the rusty file and the head of a whiskey
keg, upon which was a sunken word and unintelligible letters.
We found the place, said Rhea.
Franklin built a camp in here in 1890 and an 1833 Captain Backwintered here when he was
in search of Captain Ross of the vessel Fury.
It was those exploring parties that cut the trees.
I seen the Indian sign out there made last winter.
I reckon, but Indian never cut down, no trees.
The hunters completed the cabin, piled cords of firewood outside,
stowed away the kegs of dried fish and fruits,
the sacks and flour, boxes of crackers, canned meats and vegetables,
sugar, salt, coffee, tobacco, all the cargo,
then took the boat apart and carried it up the bank,
which labor took them less than a week.
Jones found sleeping in the cabin, despite the fire uncomfortably cold,
because of the white chinks between the logs.
It was hardly better than sleeping under the swaying spruces.
When he essayed to stop up the cracks,
a task by no means easy considering the lack of material.
Ray laughed he short, ho, ho, and stopped him with the word, wait.
Every morning the green ice extended further out into the lake.
The sun paled dim and dimmer.
The nights grew colder.
On October 8th, the thermometer registered several degrees below zero.
fell a little more the next night and continued to fall.
Oh, ho, cried Ray.
She struck the toboggan.
And presently she'll commence to slide.
Come on, buff, we've worked to do.
He caught up a bucket made for their hole in the ice.
Rebroke a six-inch layer, the freeze of a few hours,
and filling his bucket returned to the cabin.
Jones had no inkling of the trapper's intention,
and wonderingly he soused his bucket full of water and followed.
by the time he had reached the cabin a matter of some thirty or forty good paces the water no longer splashed from his bale for a thin film of ice prevented rea stood fifteen feet from the cabin his back to the wind and through the water some of it froze in the air most of it froze on the logs
The simple plan of the trapper to encase the cabin with ice was easily divined.
All day the men worked, ceasing only when the cabin resembled a glistening mound.
It had not a sharp corner nor crevice.
Inside it was warm and snug, and as light as when the chinks were open.
A slight moderation of the weather brought to snow, such snow,
a blinding white flutter of great flakes as large as feathers.
All day they rustled softly.
All night they swirled, sweeping, sweeping, seeping, brushing against the cabin.
Ho, ho, roared Ray.
Tis good.
Let her snow and the reindeer will migrate.
We'll have fresh meat.
The sun shone again, but not brightly.
A nipping wind cut down out of the frigid north encrusted the snow,
the third night following the storm when the hunters lay snug under their blankets.
The commotion outside aroused them.
Indians, said Ray.
Come north for reindeer.
Half the night, shouting and yelling, barking of dogs,
hauling of sleds and cracking of dried-skinned tepees,
murdered sleep for those in the cabin.
In the morning the level plain and edge of the forest held the Indian village.
Caribou hides strung on forked poles,
constituted tent-like habitations, and no distinguishable doors.
Fire smoked in holes in the snow.
Not till late in the day did any life manifest itself round to tree-peas.
and then a group of children, poorly clad in ragged pieces of blankets,
skins gaped at Jones.
He saw their pinched brown faces, staring hungry eyes,
naked legs and throats,
and noted particularly their dwarfish sighs.
When he spoke, they fled precipitously, a little way, then turned.
He called again, and all ran except one small land.
Jones went into the cabin and came out with a handful of sugar and square lumps.
Yellowknife, Indians, said Ray.
A starved tribe.
We're in for it.
Jones made motions to the lad, but he remained still, as if transfixed,
and his black eyes stared wonderingly.
Moller Nassu.
White man good, said Ray.
The lad came out of his trance and looked back at his companions who edged nearer.
Jones ate a lump of sugar, then handed one to the little Indian.
He took it gingerly, put it in his mouth, and immediately jumped up and down.
Hopi shipipa, hopi, hopi shipipoli.
He shouted to his brothers and sisters.
They came on the run.
Think he means sweet salt, interpreted Ray.
Of course, these beggars never tasted sugar.
A band of youngsters trooped around Jones,
and after tasting the white lumps,
shrieked in such delight that the Braves and Squaw shuffled out of the tree peas.
In all his days, Jones had never seen such miserable Indians.
Dirty blankets hid all their person,
except straggling black hair, hungry, wolfish eyes,
and moccasin's feet.
They crowded into the path before the cabin door and mumbled and stared and waited.
No dignity, no brightness, no suggestion of friendliness marked this peculiar attitude.
Starved, exclaimed Ray.
They've come to the lake to invoke the great spirit to send the reindeer.
Buff, whatever you do, don't feed them.
If you do, we'll have them on our hands all winter.
It's cruel, but, man, we're in the north.
Notwithstanding the practical trappers' admonations,
Jones could not resist the pleading of the children.
He could not stand by and see them starve.
After ascertaining there was absolutely nothing to eat in the teepees.
He invited little ones into the cabin and made a great pot of soup,
into which he dropped compressed biscuits.
The savage children were like wildcats.
Jones had to call Reha to assist him in keeping the famished little aborigines
from tearing each other to pieces.
When finally they were all fed,
they had to be driven out of the cabin.
That's new to me, said Jones, poor little beggars.
Ray doubtfully shook his shaggy head.
Next day, Jones traded with the yellow knives.
He had a good supply of bubbles besides blankets,
gloves, gloves, and boxes of canned goods,
which he had brought for such trading.
He secured a dozen of the large-boned white and black Indian dogs, huskies.
Ray called him two long sleds with harnesses and several pairs of snow-shoes.
This trade made Jones rub his hands in satisfaction,
for during all the long journey north he had failed to barter for such cardinal necessities
to the success of his venture.
But have doled out the grub to them in rations, grumbled Ray.
Twenty-four hours suffice to show Jones the wisdom of the trapper's words,
for in just that time the crazed ignorant savages had gutted the generous store of food
which should have lasted them for weeks.
The next day they were begging at the cabin door.
Ray cursed and threatened them with his fist,
but they returned again and again.
Days passed, all the time in light and dark.
The Indians filled the air with dismal chant
and doleful incarnations to the great spirit.
And a tum-tum-tum of the tom-toms.
A specific feature of their wild prayer for food.
But the white monotony of the rolling land
and the level lake remained unbroken.
The reindeer did not come.
The days became shorter, dimmer, darker.
The mercury kept on the slide.
Forty degrees below zero did not trouble the Indians.
They stamped till they dropped.
Then sang till their voices vanished and beat the tom-toms
everlastingly.
Jones fed the children once each day against the trapper's advice.
One day while Ray was absent,
a dozen brave succeeded in forcing an entrance
and clamored so fiercely and threatened so desperately
that Jones was on the point of giving them food.
when the door opened to admit Rea.
With a glance he saw the situation.
He dropped the bucket he carried,
through the door wide open and commenced action.
Because of his great bulk,
he seemed slow,
but every blow of his slidged hammer fist
knocked a brave against the wall,
or threw the door into the snow.
When he could reach two savages at once
by way of diversion,
he swung their heads together with a crack.
They dropped like sacks of corn,
pitching them out into the snow.
In two minutes the cabin was clear.
He banged the door and slipped the bar in place.
But I'm going to get mad at these leaving redskins someday, he said gruffly.
The expanse of his chest heaved slightly like the slow swell of a calm ocean,
but there was no other indication of unusual exertion.
Jones laughed and again gave thanks for the comradeship of this strange man.
Shortly afterward he went out for wood and, as usual, scanned the expanse of the lake.
The sun shone, mistier and wainer.
and frost feathers floated in the air.
Sky and sun and plain and lake.
All were gray.
Jones fancied he saw a distant moving mass
of darker shade than the gray background.
He called the trapper.
Caribou, said Ray instantly.
The vanguard of the migration.
Hear the Indians?
Hear their cry.
A tone, atone.
They mean reindeer.
The idiots have scared the herd
with their infernal racket
and no meat will they get.
The caribou will keep to the ice, and man or Indian can't stock them there.
For a few moments his companion surveyed the lake and shore with a plainsman's eye,
then dashed within to reappear with a Winchester in each hand.
Through the crowd of bewailing, bemoaning Indians he sped, to the low, dying bank.
The hard crust of snow upheld him.
The gray cloud was a thousand yards out upon the lake, and moving southeast.
If the caribou did not swer from this course, they would pass close to a projection,
projecting point of land, a half mile up the lake.
So, keeping a wary eye upon them, the hunter ran swiftly.
He had not hunted antelope and buffalo on the plains all his life without learning how to approach moving game.
As long as the caribou were in action, they could not tell whether he moved or was motionless.
In order to tell if an object was inanimate or not, they must stop to see, of which fact the keen hunter took advantage.
Suddenly he saw the gray mass slowed down and bunch up.
He stopped running.
to stand like a stump.
When the reindeer moved again, he moved,
and when they slackened again,
he stopped and became motionless.
As they kept to their course,
he worked gradually closer and closer.
Soon he distinguished gray bobbing heads.
When the leader showed signs of halting in his slow trot,
the hunter again became a statue.
He saw they were easy to deceive
and daringly confident of success,
encroached on the ice and closed up the gap
till not more than 200 yards separated him from the gray bobbing,
Handlered Mass.
Jones dropped to one knee,
a moment only his eyes lingered admiring on the wild and beautiful spectacle.
Then he swept one of the rifles to a level.
Old habit made the little beaded sight cover first the stately leader.
Bang!
The Grey Monarch leaped.
Straight forward, Warhofs up,
entered the head back to fall dead with a crash.
Then, for a few moments,
the Winchester spat a deadly stream of fire.
and when emptied was thrown down for the other gun,
which, in the steady, sure hands of the hunter,
belched death to the caribou.
The herd rushed on, leaving the white surface of the lake gray
with a struggling, kicking, bellowing heap.
When Jones reached the caribou,
he saw several young ones trying to rise on crippled legs.
With his knife, he killed these,
not without some hazard to himself.
Most of the fallen ones were already dead,
and the others soon lay still.
Beautiful gray creatures, they were almost white,
with wide-reaching symmetrical horns.
A medley of yells arose from the shore,
and Ray appeared running with two sleds,
with the whole tribe of yellow knives
pouring out of the forest behind him.
Buff, you're just what old Jim said you was,
thundered Ray, as he surveyed the gray pile.
Here's winter meat,
and I'd have not given a biscuit for all the meat I thought you'd get.
Thirty shots in less than thirty seconds, said Jones,
and I'll bet every ball I sent touched hair.
How many reindeer?
Twenty.
Twenty.
But for all, I'll forget how to count.
I guess maybe you can't handle them shooting arms.
Oh, here comes the howling redskins.
Ray whipped out his bowie knife and began disemboweling the reindeer.
He had not proceeded far on his task when the cray's savages were around him.
Everyone carried a basket or receptacle which he swung aloft,
and they sang, prayed, rejoiced on their knees.
Jones turned away from the sickening scenes
that convinced him these savages were a little better than cannibals.
Ray cursed them and tumbled them over,
and threatened them with the big buoy.
An altercation ensued.
Heated on his side, frenzied on theirs.
Thinking some treachery might befall his comrades,
Jones ran into the thick of the group.
Share with him.
Ray, share with him.
Whereupon the giant hauled out ten smoking carcasses,
bursting into a babble of savage glee
and tumbling over one another, the Indians
pulled the caribou to the shore.
Cleveland fools, growled Ray,
wiping the sweat from his brow.
Said they'd prevailed on the great spirit
to send the reindeer.
Why, they'd never smelled warm meat but for you.
Now, buff, they'll gorge every hair
hide and hoof of their share
in less than a week.
That's the last we'd do for the damned cannibals.
Didn't you see them eating of the raw minards?
Yeah.
I'm calculating.
and we'll see no more reindeer. It's late in the migration. The big herd is driven southward,
but we're lucky, thanks to your prairie training. Come on now with the sleds, or we'll have a pack of wolves
to fight. By loading three reindeer on each sled, the hunters were not long in transporting them
to the cabin. Buff? There ain't much doubt about them keeping nice and cool, said Ray.
They'll freeze and weaken skin when we want. That night, the starved wolf dogs gorged themselves
till they could not rise from the snow.
Likewise, the yellow knives feasted.
How long the ten reindeer might have served the wasteful tribe,
Ray and Jones, never found out.
Next day, two Indians arrived with dog trains,
and their advent was hailed with another feast
and pow-wall that lasted into the night.
Guess we're going to get rid of our blasted hungry neighbors,
said Ray coming in next morning with the water pail,
and I'll be darned, buff,
if I don't believe them crazy heathen have been told about you.
them indians was messengers grab your gun and we'll walk over and see the old nines were breaking camp and the hunters were at once conscious of the difference in their bearing ray addressed several braves but got no reply
the lady's broad hand on the old wrinkle chief who repulsed him and turned his back with a growl the trapper spun the indian around and spoke as many words of the language as he knew he got a cold response which ended in the ragged old chief starting up stretching along dark arm
northward, and his eyes fixed in fanatical subjection and shout,
"'Naza!
Naza!
Heathen!'
Ray shook his gun in the faces of the messengers.
"'It'll go bad with you to come Nazian any longer on our trail.
Come, buff.
Clear out before I get mad.'
When they were once more in the cabin,
Ray told Jones that the messengers had been sent to warn the yellow knives,
not to aid the white hunters in any way.
That night the dogs were kept inside,
and the men took turns of.
and watching, morning showed a broad trail southward, and with the going of the yellow knives,
the mercury dropped to fifty, and the long twilight winter night fell.
So with this agreeable riddance and plenty of meat and fuel to cheer them, the hunter sat down
in their snug cabin to wait many months for daylight. Those few intervals, when the wind did
not blow, were the only times Ray and Jones got out of doors. To the plainsman, new to the north,
the dim gray world about him, was of exceeding,
interest. Out of the twilight shonewan, round, lustreless ring that Ray said was the sun.
Silence and desolation were heart-numbing. Where are the wolves? asked Jones of Ray.
Wolves can live on snow. They're further south after Caribou, or further north after muscocks.
In those few still intervals, Jones remained out as long as he dared. With the mercury sinking to
sixty degrees, he turned from the wonder of the unreal remote sun to the marvel of the north,
Aurora Borealis, ever present, ever changing, ever beautiful.
And he gazed in rapt attention.
Polar lights, said Ray, as if he were speaking of biscuits.
You'll freeze, it's getting cold.
Cold it became, to the matter of 70 degrees, frost covered the walls of the cabin
and the roof except for over the fire.
The reindeer were harder than iron.
A knife or an axe, a steel trap burned as if it had been heated in fire,
and stuck to the hand.
The hunters experienced trouble in breathing.
The air hurt their lungs.
The month dragged.
Ray grew more silent day by day,
and as he sat before the fire,
his wide shoulders sagged lower and lower.
Jones, unaccustomed to the waiting,
the restraint, the barrier of the north,
worked on guns, sleds, harnesses,
till he felt he would go mad.
Then to save his mind,
he constructed a windmill of caribou hides
and pondered over it.
trying to invent to put into practical use an idea he had once conceived hour after hour he laid under his blankets unable to sleep and listened to the north wind sometimes ray mumbled in his slumbers
once his giant form started up and he muttered a woman's name shadows from the fire flickered on the walls visionary spectral shadows cold and gray fitting the north at such times he longed with all the power of his soul to be among those scenes far aside
southward, which he called home. For days, Ray never spoke a word, only gazed into the fire,
ate and slept. Jones, drifting far from his real self, feared the strange mood of the trapper
and sought to break it, but without a veil. More and more he reproached himself, and singularly
on the one fact that, as he did not smoke himself, he had brought only a small store of tobacco.
Ray, inordinate and inveterate smoker, had puffed away all the
the weed and clouds of white, then had relapsed into gloom.
End of Chapter 9.
Chapter 10 of The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray.
The Sleeper-Vox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Mike Vendetti, Mike Vendetti.com.
The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 10.
Success and failure.
At last the marble in the north dimmed, the obscure gray shade lifted.
The hope in the south brightened and the mercury climbed.
reluctantly, with a tyrant's hate to relinquish power.
Spring weather at twenty-five below zero.
On April 12th a small band of Indians made their appearance of the dog tribe,
were they an offcast of the great slaves, according to Ray,
and as motley, staring and starved as the yellow knives.
But they were friendly, which presupposed ignorance of the white hunters,
and Ray persuaded the strongest brave to accompany them
as guide northward after Musk Oxen.
On April 16th, having given the Indians several caribou cargasses and assuring them that the cabin was protected by white spirits,
Ray and Jones, each with sled and train of dogs, started out after their guide,
who was similarly equipped over the glistening snow toward the north.
They made 60 miles the first day and pitched their Indian teepee on the shores of Artillery Lake.
Traveling northeast, they covered its white waist of 100 miles in two days.
Then a day due north, overrolling, monotonously snowy plain, devoid of rock, tree, or shrub,
brought them into a country of the strangest, queerest little spruce trees, very slender,
and none of them, over fifteen feet in height, a primeval forest of saplings.
Tichen, Nietzula, said the guide.
Land of Styx Little, translated Ray.
An occasional reindeer was seen, and numerous foxes and hares, trotted off into the woods.
"'advincing more curiosity than fear.
"'All were silver-white, even the reindeer,
"'at a distance, taking the hue of the north.
"'Once a beautiful creature, unblemished as the snow,
"'it trod ran, up a ridge, and stood watching the hunters.
"'It resembled a monster dog,
"'only was inexpressibly more wild-looking.
"'Oh, oh, there you are!' cried Ray,
"'reaching for his Winchester,
"'uller Wolf.
"'Thim's the white devil will have help.'
with. As if the wolf understood he lifted his white, sharp head and uttered a bark or howl
that was like nothing so much as a haunting unearthly morn. The animal then merged into the white,
as if he were really a spirit of the world whence his cry seemed to come. In this ancient
forest of youthful appearing trees the hunters cut firewood to the full carrying capacity of the sleds.
For five days the Indian guide drove his dogs over the smooth crust and on the
sixth day, about noon, halting in a hollow, he pointed to tracks in the snow and called out,
Egoteer, Egoteer, Agateer, Agatier.
The hunters saw sharply defiant hoof marks, not unlike the tracks of reindeer, except that they were
longer. The teepee was set up on the spot, and the dogs unharnessed. The Indian led the way
with the dogs, and Ray and Jones followed, slipping over the hard crust, without sinking in
and traveling swiftly. Soon the guide pointed again and let out a cry,
at the same moment loosing the dogs.
Some few hundred yards down the hollow,
a number of large black animals,
not unlike the shaggy, humpy buffalo,
lumbered over the snow.
Jones echoed Ray Gell and broke into a run,
easily distancing the puffing giant.
The musk oxen squared round to the dogs
and were soon surrounded by the yelping pack.
Jones came up to find six old bulls,
uttering grunts of rage and shaking ram-like horns
at their tormentors.
Notwithstanding that,
This for Jones was his accumulation of years of desire the crowning moment,
the climax and fruition of Long Harbor dreams.
He halted before the tame and helpless beasts with joy not unmixed with pain.
It will be murder, he exclaimed.
It's like shooting down sheep.
Ray came crashing up behind him and yelled,
Get busy.
We need fresh meat, and I want the skins.
The bull succumbed to wild-directed shots,
and the Indian and Ray hurried back to camp,
with the dogs to fetch the sleds.
while jones examined with warm interest the animals he had wanted to see all his life he found the largest bull approached within a third of the size of a buffalo he was of a brownish-black color and very like a large woolly ram
his head was broad with sharp small ears the horns had wide and flattened bases and lay flat on the head to run down back of the eyes then curve forward to a sharp point like the bison the muck's scocks had short heavy limbs
covered with very long hair and small hard hooves with hairy tufts inside the curve of bone which probably served as pads or checks to hold the hoof firm on ice his legs seemed out of proportion to his body
two musk oxen were loaded on a sled and hauled to camp in one trip skinning them was but a short work for such expert hands all the choice cuts of meat were saved no time was lost in broiling a steak which they found sweet and juicy with a
the flavor of musk that was disagreeable.
Now, Ray, for the calves, exclaimed Jones, and then were homeward bound.
I hate to tell his redskin, replied Ray.
He'll be like the others.
But it ain't likely he'll desert us here.
He's far from his base with nothing but that will musket.
Ray then commanded the attention of the brave and began to mingle the great slave and
yellow-knife languages.
Of this mixture, Jones knew but a few.
words. Agatier Nietzsche, which Ray kept repeating. He knew, however, meant muscocks and little.
The guide stared, suddenly appeared to get Ray's meaning, and vigorously shook his head and gazed
at Jones in fear and horror. Following this came in action as singular as inexplicable.
Slowly rising, he faced the north, lifted his hand, and remained statuesque in his immobility.
Then he began deliberately packing his blankets and traps on his sled.
which had not been unhitched from the train of dogs.
Jaco'e to Jeholah, he said and pointed south.
Jackaway de chenholah, echoed Ray.
The damned Indian said wife sticks none.
He's going to quit us.
What do you think of that?
His wife's out of wood.
Jackaway, out of wood.
And here we are, two days from the Arctic Ocean.
Jones, the damned heathen, don't go back.
The trapper coolly cocked his rifle, the savage who plainly saw and understood the action,
never flinched.
He turned his breast to Ray, and there was nothing in his demeanor to suggest his relation to a craven tribe.
"'Good heavens, Ray! Don't kill him!' exclaimed Jones, knocking up the leveled rifle.
"'Why not, I'd like to know?' demanded Ray, as if he were considering the fate of a threatening beast.
"'I reckon it'd be a bad thing for us to let him go.'
Let him go, said Jones.
We are here on the ground. We have dogs and meat.
We'll get our calves and reach the lake as soon as he does,
and we might get there before.
Maybe we will, growled Ray.
No vacillation attended the Indians' mood.
From a friendly guide, he had suddenly been transformed into a dark sullen savage.
He refused the musk-cogs meat, offered by Jones,
and he pointed south and looked at the white hunters as if he asked them.
them to go with him. Both men shook their heads and answer. The savage struck his breast,
a sounding blow, and with his index finger pointed at the white of the north, and shouted dramatically,
Naza, Naza, Naza! He then leaped upon his sled, lashed his dogs into a run, and without looking
back, disappeared over a ridge. The musk-ox hunter sat long, silent. Finally, Ray shook his shaggy
locks and roared, oh, ho! jock away out of wood! Jack-a-way-out-of-wood! Jack-a-way-
of wood, jack away out of wood. On a day following the desertion, Jones found tracks to the north
of the camp, making a broad trail in which there were numerous little imprints that sent him
flying back to get Ray and the dogs. Musk, oxen, in great numbers, had passed in the night,
and Jones and Ray had not trailed the herd a mile before they had it in sight. When the dogs
burst into full cry, the musk oxen climbed a high knoll and squared about to give battle.
"'Calves! Caves! Caves! Caves!' cried Jones.
"'Hold back, hold back. That's a big herd, a nil-show fight.
As good fortune would have it, the herd split up into several sections,
and one part, hard-pressed by the dogs, ran down the knoll to be cornered under the lee of a bank.
The hunter seemed a small number hurried again upon them,
to find three cows and five badly frightened little calves backed against the bank of snow,
with small red-eyes fastened on the barking, snapping dogs.
to a man of Jones' experience and skill.
The capturing of the calves was a ridiculously easy piece of work.
The cows tossed their heads, watched the dogs, and forgot their young.
The first cast of the lasso settled over the neck of a little fellow.
Jones hauled him out over the slippery snow and laughed as he bound the hairy legs.
In less time than he had taken to capture one buffalo cap with half the effort.
He had all the little musk oxen bound fast.
Then he signaled his feet by peeling out an Indian yellow victory.
"'Buff, we got him!' cried Ray.
"'And now for the hell of it, getting them home.
I'll fetch the sleds.
You might as well down that best cow for me.
I can use another skin.'
Of all Jones's prizes of captured wild beasts,
which numbered nearly every species common to Western North America,
he took greatest pride in the little musk oxen.
In truth, so great had been his passion to capture some of the same,
of these rare and inaccessible mammals that he considered the day's work the fulfillment of his life's
purpose. He was happy. Never had he been so delighted as when the very evening of their captivity,
the musk oxen, evincing no particular fear of him, began to dig with sharp hooves into the snow
for moss, and they found moss and ate it, which solves Jones's greatest problem. He had hardly dared
to think how to feed them.
And here they were,
picking sustenance out of the frozen snow.
Ray, will you look at that?
Ray, will you look at that?
He kept repeating.
See, they're hunting for feed.
And the giant with his rare smile
watched him play with the calves.
They were about two and a half feet high
and resembled long-haired sheep.
The ears and horn were undiscernible
and they're color considerably lighter
than that of the matured beasts.
No sense of fear of man, said the life-student of animals, but they shrink from the dogs.
In packing for the journey south, the captives were strapped on the sleds.
This circumstance necessitated a sacrifice of meat and wood, which brought grave doubtful shakes
of raised great head.
Days of hastening over the icy snow with short hours of sleep and rest, passed before the
hunters awoke to the consciousness that they were lost.
The meat they had packed had gone.
to feed themselves and the dogs.
Only a few sticks of wood were left.
Better kill a calf and cook meat
while we've got a little wood left, suggested Ray.
Kill one of my calves I'd starve first, cried Jones.
The hungry giant said no more.
They headed southwest.
All about them glared the grim monotony of the Arctic.
No rock or bush or tree
made a welcome mark upon the hoary plain.
Wonderland of Frost.
white marble desert, infinitude of gleaming silences.
Snow began to fall, making the dog flounder,
obliverating the sun by which they traveled.
They camped to wait for clearing weather.
Biscuits soaked in tea made their meal.
At dawned Jones crawled out of the tepee.
The snow had ceased.
But where were the dogs?
He yelled an alarm.
Then little mounds of white scattered here and there
became animated.
He rocked and rose to fall to pieces,
exposing the dogs.
blankets of snow had been their covering.
Ray had ceased his jackaway out of wood,
or a reiterated question,
Where are the wolves?
Lost, replied Jones in hollow humor.
Near the close of that day in which they had resumed travel
from the crest of a ridge,
they described a long low,
underlating dark line,
proved to be the forest of the little sticks,
where with grateful assurance of fire
and of soon finding their old trail,
They made camp.
We've four biscuits left and enough tea for one drink each, said Ray.
I'd calculate we're two hundred miles from Great Slave Lake.
Where are the wolves?
At that moment the night wind waved through the forest to long, haunting morn.
The calves shifted uneasily.
The dogs raised sharp noses to sniff the air.
And Ray, settling it back against a tree, cried out,
"'Ho!
"'Again, the savage sound,
"'a keen, wailing note
"'with the hunger of the Northland
"'and broke the cold silence.
"'You'll see a pack of real wolves in a minute,' said Ray.
"'Soon a swift pattering of feet down a forest slope
"'brought him to his feet with a curse
"'to reach a brawny hand for his rifle.
"'White streaks crossed the black of the tree trunks.
"'Then, in distinct forms,
"'the color of snow swept up, spread out,
"'and streak to and fro.
Jones thought the great gaunt, pure white beast, the spectral whirls of Ray's fantasy, for they
were silent, and silent wolves must belong to dreams only.
Oh, yelled Ray, there's green fire eyes for you, buff.
Hill itself ain't nothing to these white devils, get the calves in the teepee, and stand ready
to lose the dogs, for we've got to fight.
Raising his rifle, he opened fire upon the white foe, a struggling rustling sound followed,
the shots, but whether it was the threshing about of wolves dying in agony or the fighting
of the fortunate ones over those shot could not be ascertained in the confusion. Following his example,
Jones also fired rapidly on the other side of the teepee. The same inarticulate silently
rustling rustle succeeded his volley. Wait, cried Ray. Bees barren of cartridges. The dog
strained at their chains and bravely bade the wolves. The hunters heaped logs and brush on
the fire, which, blazing up, sent a bright light far into the woods. On the outer edge of the
circle moved the white, rustless, gliding forms. They're more afraid of fire than us,
said Jones. So it proved. When the fire burned and crackled, they kept well in the background.
The hunters had a long respite from serious anxiety, during which time they collected all the
available wood at hand, but at midnight, when this had been mostly consumed, the wolves grew bold
again. Have he any shots left for the 45-90, besides what's in the magazine? Ask Ray.
Yes, good handful. Well, good busy. With careful aimed zones empty the magazine into the
gray-gliding groping mass. The same rustling shuffling, almost silence strife ensued.
Ray, there's something uncanny about those brutes, a silent pack of wolves. Oh,
rolled the giant's answer through the woods. For the present,
But the attack appeared to have been effectually blocked.
The hunters sparingly adding a little to their fast diminishing pile of fuel to the fire,
decided to lie down for much needed rest, but not for sleep.
How long they lay there, cramped by the calves, listening for stealthy steps?
Neither could tell.
It might have been moments, and it might have been outright.
All at once came a rapid rush of pattering feet, succeeded by a chorus of angry barks,
then a terrible commingling of savage snarls, growls, and yelps.
"'Out!' yelled Ray.
"'They're on the dogs!'
Jones pushed his cocked rifle ahead of him
and straightened up outside the teepee.
A wolf, large as a panther and white as the gleaming snow,
sprang at him.
Even as he discharged his rifle right against the breast of the beast,
he saw its dripping jaws, its wicked green eyes,
like spurts of fire and felt its hot breath.
It fell at its feet and writhed in the death's struggle.
Slender bodies of black and white whirling and tussled together.
sent out fainty uproar,
Ray threw a blazing stick of wood among them,
which sizzled as it met the furry coats,
and brandishing another, he ran into the thick of the fight,
unable to stand the proximity of fire,
the wolves bolted and loped off into the woods.
What a huge brute! exclaimed Jones,
dragging the one he had shot into the light.
It was a superb animal, thin, supple, strong,
with a coat of frosty fur, very long and five.
Ray began at once to skin it, remembering that he hoped to find other peltz in the morning.
Those wolves remained in the vicinity of camp.
None ventured near.
The dogs moaned and whined.
Their restlessness increased as dawn approached,
and when the gray light came, Jones found that some of them have been badly lacerated by the fangs of the wolves.
Ray hunted for dead wolves and found not so much as a piece of white fur.
Soon the hunters were speeding southward.
Other than a disposition to fight among themselves,
the dog showed no evil effects of the attack.
They were lashed to their best speed,
for Ray said the white rangers of the north would never quit their trail.
All day the men listened for the wild, lonesome haunting mourn,
but it came not.
A wonderful halo of white and gold that Ray called a sun dog
hung in the sky all afternoon,
and dazzlingly bright over the dazzling world of snow,
circled and glowed,
A mocking sun.
Brother of the desert mirage,
beautiful allusioned, smiling cold,
out of the polar blue.
The first pale evening star twinkled in the east
when the hunters made camp on the shore of Artillery Lake.
At dusk the clear silent air
opened to the sound of a long, haunting moan.
Oh, ho! Call Ray.
His hoarse, deep voice rang defiance of the foe.
While he built a fire before the tepee,
Joan strode up and down,
suddenly to whip out his knife and make for the tame little musk oxen, now digging in the snow.
Then he reeled abruptly and held out the blade to Ray.
What for?
We've got to eat, Seth Jones, and I can't kill one of them.
I can't.
So you do it.
Kill one of our calves?
Roared Ray.
Not till hell freezes over.
I ain't commenced to get hungry.
Besides, the wolves are going to eat us, calves and all.
Nothing more was said.
They ate their last biscuit.
jones packed the calves away in the tepee and turned to the dogs all day they had worried him something was amiss with them and even as he went among them a fierce fight broke out jones saw it was unusual for the attack dogs showed craven fear and the attacking once a howlage savage intensity that surprised him
Then one of the vicious brutes rolled his eyes, frost at the mouth, shuddered and leapt in his harness, vented a horse howl, and fell back, shaking and wretching.
My God, Ray, cried Jones in horror.
Come here, look.
That dog is dying of rabies, hydrophobia.
The white wolves have hydrophobia.
If you ain't right, exclaimed Ray, I've seen a dog die of that once, and he acted like this.
And that one ain't all.
Look, buff.
Look at him green eyes.
Didn't I say the white wolves would hell?
We'll have to kill every dog we got.
Joan shot the dog, and soon afterwards three more
that manifested signs of the disease.
It was an awful situation.
To kill all the dogs meant simply to sacrifice his life and rays,
it meant a banding hope of ever reaching the cabin.
Then to risk being bitten by one of the poisoned madden brutes
to risk the most horrible of agonizing deaths,
that was even worse.
"'Ray, we've got one chance,' cried Jones, with pale face.
"'Can you hold the dogs one by one while I muzzle them?'
"'Oh, ho,' replied the giant, placing his bowie knife between his teeth,
with gloved hands he seized and dragged one of the dogs to the campfire.
The animal whined and protested, but showed no ill spirit.
Jones muscled his jaws tightly with strong cords.
Another and another were tied up.
Then one which tried to snap at Jones was nearly crushed by the giant's
grip. The last, a surly brute, broke out into mad ravings the moment he felt the touch of Jones's
hands. And writhing, frothing, he snapped Jones's sleeve. Ray jerked him loose and held him in the
air with one arm, while with the other he swung the bowie. They hauled the dead dogs,
out on the snow, and returning to the fire sat down to await the cry they expected.
Presently his darkness fastened down tight. It came the same cry, wild, haunting morning. But
hours. It was not repeated. Better get some rest, said Ray. I'll call you if they come.
Jones dropped to sleep as he touched his blanket, morning dawn for him to find the great, dark,
shadowy figure of the giant nodding over the fire. How's this? Why didn't you call me? demanded
Jones. The wolves only fought a little over the dead dogs. On the instant Jones saw a wolf
sulking up the bank, throwing up his rifle which he had carried out of the tepee.
he took a snapshot at the beast. It ran off on three legs to go out of sight over the bank.
Jones scrambled up the steep, slippery place, and upon arriving at the ridge, which took several
moments of hard work, he looked everywhere for the wolf. In a moment he saw the animal, standing still
some hundred or more paces down a hollow. With the quick report of Jones's second shot, the wolf fell
and rolled over. The hunter ran to the spot to find the wolf was dead. Taking hold of a front paw,
he dragged the animal over the snow to camp.
Ray began to skin the animal when suddenly exclaimed,
"'This fellow's hind foot is gone.'
"'That's strange. I saw it hanging by the skin as the wolf ran up the bank.
I'll look for it.
By the bloody trail on the snow he returned to the place where the wolf had fallen
and thence back to the spot where its leg had been broken by the bullet.
He discovered no sign of the foot.
"'Didn't find it, did you?' said Ray.
"'No, it appears odd to me.
the snow is so hard the foot could not have sunk.
Well, the wolf ate his foot, that's what, returned Ray.
Look at them teeth marks.
Is it possible?
Jones stared at the leg Ray held up.
Yes, it is.
These wolves are crazy at times.
You've seen that.
And the smell of blood is nothing else, mind you, in my opinion, made him eat his own foot.
We'll cut him open.
Impossible as the thing seemed to Jones.
and he could not but believe further evidence of his own eyes.
It was even stranger to drive a train of mad dogs.
Yet that was what Ray, and he did, and lashed them,
beat them to cover many miles of the long day's journey.
Rabies had broken out in several dogs so alarmingly
that Jones had to kill him at the end of the run,
and hardly had the sound of the shots died,
when faint and far away, but clear as a bell,
bade on the wind the same haunting morn of a trailing wolf.
Oh, ho!
Where are the wolves? cried Ray.
A waiting, watching sleepless night followed.
Again the hunters faced the south.
Hour after hour, riding, running, walking,
they urged the poor jaded poison dogs.
At dark they reached the head of Artillery Lake.
Ray placed the teepee between two huge stones.
Then the hungry hunters tired, grim,
silent, desperate, awaited the familiar cry. It came on the cold wind, the same haunting
mourn, dreadful, and its significance. Absence of fire inspired the very wolves. Out of the pale gloom,
gaunt white forms emerged, agile, stealthy, slipping on velvet-padded feet closer, closer, closer,
the dogs wailed in terror. Into the teepee, yelled Ray. Jones plunged in after his comrade.
The despairing howls of the dogs drowned in more savage, frightful sounds, knelt one tragedy
and foretold a more terrible one.
Jones looked out to see a white mass, like leaping waves of a rapid.
Pump led into that, cried Ray.
Rapidly Jones emptied his rifle into the white fray.
The mass split, Gaunt Wolf leaped high to fall back dead.
Others wriggled and limped away.
Others dragged their hind quarters.
Others darted.
at the tee-p.
No more cartridges, yelled Jones.
The giant grabbed an axe and barred the door of the tepee.
Crash the heavy iron cleaved the skull of the first brute.
Crash at lame the second.
Then Ray stood in the narrow passage between the rocks, waiting with uplifted axe.
A shaggy white demon snapped his jaw, sprang like a dog.
A sodden thudding blow met him, and he slunk away without a cry.
Another rabid beast launched his white body at the giant.
Like a flash they axed a sacked.
In agony, the wolf fell to spin round and round, running on his hind legs while his head
and shoulders and forelegs remained in the snow.
His back was broken.
Jones crouched in the opening of the teepee, knife in hand.
He doubted his senses.
This was a nightmare.
He saw two wolves sleep at once.
He heard the crash of the axe.
He saw one wolf go down and the other slip under the swinging weapon to grasp the giant's hip.
Jones heard the rend of cloth, and then he pounced.
like a cat and drove his knife into the body of the beast.
Another nimble foe lunged at Ray to sprawl broken and limp from the iron.
It was a silent fight.
The giant shut the way to his comrade and the calves.
He made no outcry.
He needed but one blow for every beast magnificent.
He wielded death and faced it, silent.
He brought the white wild dogs of the north down with lightning blows.
And when no more sprang to the attack,
Down on the frigid silence he rolled his cry.
Oh!
Ray, Ray, how is it with you?
Called Jones climbing out.
Torn coat, no more, my lad.
Three of the poor dogs were dead.
The fourth and last gasped at the hunters and died.
The wettary night became a thing of half-conscious past,
a dream to the hunters,
manifesting its reality only by the stark, stiff bodies of wolves white
in the gray morning.
If we can eat, we'll make the cabin, said Ray.
But the dogs and wolves are poison.
Shall I kill a calf, asked Jones?
Oh, when a hell freezes over if we must.
Jones found one forty-five-ninety cartridge in all the outfit,
and with that in the chamber of his rifle, once more struck south.
Spruce trees began to show on the barrens,
and caribou trails rounds the hopes and the hearts of the hunters.
Look, in a spruces whispered Jones, dropping the rope of his sled.
Among the black trees, gray objects moved.
Caribou, said Ray.
Hurry, shoot, don't miss.
But Jones waited.
He knew the value of the last bullet.
He had a hunter's patience.
When the caribou came out in an open space, Jones whistled.
It was then the rifle grew set and fixed.
It was then the red fire belched forth.
At 400 yards,
the bullet took some fraction of time to strike.
What a long time it was.
Then both hunters heard the spiteful spat of the lead.
Caribou fell, jumped up, ran down the slope, and fell again to rise no more.
An hour of rest with fire and meat changed the world to the hunters, still glistening.
It yet had lost its bitter cold, its death-like clutch.
What's this? cried Jones.
Moccus and tracks of different sizes all towing north arrested the hunters.
Pointed north.
Wonder what that means.
Ray plotted on, doubtfully shaking his head.
Night again.
Clear, cold, silver, starlit, silent night.
The hunters rested, listening ever for the haunting morn.
Day again, white, passionless, monotonous, silent day.
The hunters traveled on, on, on, ever listening for the haunting morn.
Another dusk found them within thirty miles of their cabin.
Only one more day now.
Ray talked of his furs, of the splendid white furs he could not bring.
Jones talked of his little musk-oxen calves, and joyfully watched them dig for moss in the snow.
Vigilance relaxed at night, outworn nature rebelled, and both hunters slept.
Ray awoke first and kicking off the blankets went out.
His terrible roar of rage made Jones fly to his side.
Under the very shadow of the teepee where the little musk-oxen had been tethered,
they lay stretched out pathetically on crimson snow.
Stiff, stone-cold dead.
Mococcus and tracks told the story of the tragedy.
Jones leaned against his comrade.
The giant raised his huge fist.
Jack away out of wood.
Jack away out of wood.
Then he choked.
The north wind blowing through the thin, dark, weird spruce trees.
Mowned and seemed to have sigh.
Naza.
Naza.
Naza.
End of chapter ten.
Chapter 11 of the Last Plainsman by Zane Gray.
The Sleeper-Fox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Mike Vendetti.
Mike Vindetti.com
The Last Plainsman by Zane Gray.
Chapter 11.
On to the seawash.
Who all was doing to talking last night?
Ask Frank next morning.
When we were having a late breakfast?
Because I've a joke on somebody.
Jim, he talks in his sleep often and in a last night.
last night after you did finally get settled down, Jim, he up in his sleep and says,
sure he's windy as hell, sure he's windy as hell.
At this cruel exposure of his subjective wanderings, Jim showed extreme humiliation,
but Frank's eyes fairly snapped with the fun he got out of telling it.
The genial foreman loved a joke.
The week's day at oak, in which we all became thoroughly acquainted,
had presented Jim, as always, the same quiet character,
easy, slow, silent, lovable.
In his brother cowboy, however,
we had discovered in addition to his fine, frank, friendly spirit,
an overwhelming fondness for playing tricks.
This boy's mischievousness distinctly Arizonan
reached its acme,
whenever it tended in the direction of our serious leader.
Lawson had been dispatched on some mysterious errand,
about which my curiosity was all in vain.
The order of the day was leisurely to get in readiness
and packed for our journey to the sea-wash on the morrow.
I watered my horse, played with the hounds,
knocked about the cliffs, returned to the cabin,
and lay down on my bed.
Jim's hands were white with flour.
He was kneading dough and had several low flat pans on a table.
Wallace and Jones strolled in and later Frank,
and they all took various positions,
before the fire. I saw Frank with the quickness of a sleight of hand performer,
slip one of the pans of dough on the chair. Jones had placed by the table. Jim did not see the action.
Jones and Wallace's backs returned to Frank, and he did not know I was in the cabin. The
conversation continued on the subject of Jones' Big Bay Horse, which hobbles and all had gotten
ten miles from camp the night before. Better count his ribs, then his tracks, said Frank,
and went on talking as easily and naturally as if he had not been expecting a very entertaining situation.
But no one could ever foretell Colonel Jones's actions.
He showed every intention of seating himself in a chair,
then walked over to his pack to begin searching for something or other.
Wallace, however, promptly took the seat,
and what began to be funnier than strange, he did not get up.
Not unlikely this circumstance was owing to the fact that several of the roof chairs had saw,
layers of old blankets tacked on them.
Whatever were Frank's internal emotions,
he presented a remarkably placid and commonplace exterior.
But when Jim began to search for the missing pan of dough,
the joker slowly sagged in his chair.
Sure, that beats hell, said Jim.
And three pans of dough.
Could the pup have taken one?
Wallace rose to his feet and the breadpan clattered to the floor,
with a clangler clank,
evidently protesting against the indignity it had suffered.
But the Doe stayed with Wallace,
a great white, conspicuous spot on his corduroyes.
Jim, Frank, and Jones all saw it at once.
Why, Mr. Wallace, you said in the Doe!
exclaimed Frank in a queer strangled voice.
Then he exploded while Jim fell over the table.
It seemed that these two Arizona Rangers, matured men, though they were,
would die of conventional.
I laughed with him and so did Wallace while he brought his bone-handled Bowie knife into novel use.
Buffalo Jones never cracked a smile, though he did remark about the waste of good flour.
Frank's face was a study for a psychologist when Jim actually apologized to Wallace for being so
careless with his pants. I did not betray Frank, but I resolved to keep a still closer watch on him.
It was partially because of this uneasy sense.
of his trickiness in the fringe of my mind that I made a discovery.
My sleeping bag rested on a raised platform in one corner.
At a favorable moment, I examined the bag.
They had not been tampered with, but I noticed a string running out
through a chink between the logs.
I found it came from a thick layer of straw under my bed
and had been tied to the end of a flatly coiled blast-up.
Leaving the thing as it was, I went outside and carelessly chased.
the hounds round the cabin. The string stretched along the logs to another chink, where it returned
into the cabin and at a point near where Franks left. No great power of deduction was necessary
to acquaint me with full details of the plot to spoil my slumbers, so I patiently awaited developments.
Lawson rode in near sundown, with the carcasses of two beasts of some species hanging over his
saddle. It turned out that Jones had planned a surprise for Wallace and me, and it could hardly
have been a more enjoyable one, considering the time and place. We knew he had a flock of
Persian sheep on the south side of buckskin, but had no idea it was within striking distance of
oak. Lawson had that day hunted up the shepherd and his sheep to return to us with two
sixty-pound Persian lambs. We feasted at supper time on meat which was
sweet, juicy, and very tender, and of as rare a flavor as that of the Rocky Mountain sheep.
My state after supper was one of huge enjoyment, and with intense interest I waited Frank's
first bar for an opening. It came presently, in a lull of the conversation.
Saw a big rattler run under the cabin today. He said, as if speaking of one of old baldy shoes.
I tried to get a whack at him, but he used the way too.
quick.
Sure I seen him often, put in Jim.
Good old honest Jim, led the way by his trickster comrade.
It was very plain, so I was to be frightened by snakes.
These old canyon beds are ideal dens for rattlesnakes, chimed in my scientific
California friend.
I have found several dens, but did not molest him, as this is a particularly dangerous time
of the year to meddle with reptiles.
quite likely there's a den under the cabin.
While he made his remarkable statement,
he had the grace to hide his face in a huge puff of smoke.
He too was in the plot.
I waited for Jones to come out with some ridiculous theory or fact
concerning the particular species of snake.
But as he did not speak, I concluded they had wisely left him out of the secret.
After mentally debating a moment,
I decided, as it was a very harmless joke,
to help Frank to the fulfillment of his enjoyment.
Routesnakes! I exclaimed. Heavens!
I'd die if I heard one, let alone seeing it. A big rattler jumped at me one day,
and I've never recovered from the shock.
Plainly, Frank was delighted to hear of my antipathy
and my unfortunate experience, and he proceeded to expatterate
on the viciousness of rattlesnakes, particularly those of Arizona.
If I had believed the succeeding story,
emanating from the fertile brains of those three fellows,
I should have made certain that Arizona canyons were Brazilian jungles.
Frank's parting shot, sent in a mellow, kind voice,
was the best point in the whole trick.
Now I'd be nervous if I had a sleeping bag like ears,
because it's just the place for a rattler to ooze into.
In the confusion and dim light of bedtime,
I contrived to throw the end of my lasso over the horn of a saddle hanging on the wall,
with the intention of augmenting the noise I soon expected to create,
and I placed my automatic rifle on a 38th S&W special within easy reach of my hand.
Then I crawled into my bag and composed myself to listen.
Frank soon began to snore so bracingly, so fictitiously,
that I wondered at the man's absorbed intensity in his joke.
and I was at great pains to smother in my breast
a violent burst of riotous merriment.
Jones's snores, however, were real enough,
and this made me enjoy the situation all the more,
because if he did not show a mild surprise when the catastrophe fell,
I would greatly miss my guess.
I knew the three wily conspirators were wide awake.
Suddenly I felt a movement in a straw under me,
and a faint rustling.
It was so soft.
so sinuous, that if I had not known it was the lasso,
I would assuredly have been frightened.
I gave a little jump, such as one will make quickly in bed.
Then the coil ran out from under the straw.
How subtly suggestive of a snake!
I made a slight out cry, a big jump, paused a moment for effectiveness,
in which time Frank forgot to snore,
and then led out a tremendous yell,
grabbed my guns, and sent twelve thundering shots through the roof
and pulled my lasso.
Crash, the saddle came down, to be followed by sounds not on Frank's program, and certainly not calculated upon by me, but they were all the more effective.
I gathered that Lawson, who was not in the secret, and who was a nightmare sort of sleeper, anyway, had knocked over Jim's table with its array of pots and pans, and then, unfortunately, for Jones, it kicked that innocent person in the stomach.
As I lay there in my bag
The very happiest fellow in the wide world
The sound of my mirth
Was as the buzz of the wings of a fly
To the mighty storm
Roar on Roar filled the cabin
When the three hypocrites
Recovered sufficiently
From the startling climax to calm
Lawson, who swore the cabin
Had been attacked by Indians
When Joan stopped roaring long enough to hear it
Was only a harmless snake
That had caused the trouble
We hushed to repose once
the Gmour. Not, however, without hearing some trenchant remarks from the boiling colonel,
Anent fun and fools, and the indisputable fact that there was not a rattlesnake on Buckskin
Mountain. Long after this explosion had died away, I heard or rather felt a mysterious shutter
or tremor of the cabin, and I knew that Frank and Jim were shaking with silent laughter.
On my own score, I determined to find if Jones in his strange makeup had any sense of humor or interest in
or feeling of love that did not center and hinge on four-footed beasts.
In view of the rude awakening from what, no doubt,
were pleasant dreams of wonderful white and green animals,
combining intelligence of man and strength of brutes,
a new species credible to his genius.
I was perhaps unjust in my conviction as to his lack of humor,
and as to the other question whether or not he had any real human feeling
for the creatures built in his own image
that was decided very soon and unexpectedly.
The following morning,
as soon as Lawson got in with the horses,
we packed and started.
Rather sorry was I to bid goodbye to Oak Spring.
Taking the back trail of the stewards,
we walked the horses all day
up a slowly narrowling ascending canyon.
The hounds crossed coyotes and deer trails continually,
but made no break.
Sounder looked up as if to say he is
associated painful reminiscences with certain kinds of tracks.
At the head of the canyon we reached timber at about the time dust gathered,
and we located for the night.
Being once again nearly 9,000 feet high,
we found the air bitterly cold,
making a blazing fire most acceptable.
In the haste to get supper we all took a hand,
and someone threw upon our toperlin tablecloth
a tin cup of butter mixed with carabolic acid,
The concoction Jones used to bathe the sore feet of the dogs.
Of course I got hold of this, spread a generous portion on my hot biscuit,
placed some red-hot beans on that,
and began to eat like a hungry hunter.
At first I thought I was only burned.
Then I recognized the taste and burn of the acid and knew something was wrong.
Picking up the tin, I examined it, smelled the pungent odor,
and felt a queer, numb sense of fear.
This lasted only for a moment, as I well knew the use and power of the acid and had not swallowed enough to hurt me.
I was about to make known my mistake in a matter-of-fact way.
When it flashed over me, the accident could be made to serve a turn.
Jones!
I cried hoarsely.
What's in this butter?
Lord, you haven't eaten any of that.
Well, I put carbolic acid in it.
Oh, I'm poisoned. I ate nearly all of it. I'm burning. I'm dying.
With that I continued to moan and rocked to and fro and hold my stomach.
Consternation proceeded shock.
But in the excitement of the moment, Wallace, who though badly scared, retained his wits,
made for me with a can of condensed milk. He threw me back with no gentle hand
and was squeezing the life out of me to make me open my mouth.
When I gave him a jab in his side, I imagined his.
his surprise as this peculiar reception of the first aid to the injured made him hold off to take a look
at me, and in this interval I contrived to whisper to him.
Joke, joke, you idiot.
Only shaming.
I want to see if I can scare Jones.
Get even with Frank.
Help me out.
Cry, get tragic.
From that moment, I shall always believe that the stage lost, a great tragedy in Wallace.
With a magnificent gesture he threw the can of condensed milk of Jones,
who was so stunned he did not try to dodge.
Thoughtless man-murderer? It's too late!
cried Wallace laying me back across his knees.
It's too late, his teeth are locked.
He's far gone.
Poor boy, poor boy.
Who's to tell his mother?
I could see from under my hat brim
that the solemn hollow voiced
had penetrated the cold exterior of the plainsman.
He could not speak.
He clasped and unclapsed his big hands
in helpless fashion.
Frank was white as a sheet.
This was simply delightful to me,
but the expression of miserable, impotent distress
on old Jim's sun-brown face was more than I could stand,
and I could no longer keep up the deception.
Just as Wallace cried out to Jones to pray,
I wished then I had not weakened so soon.
I got up and walked through the fire.
Jim, I'll have another biscuit, please.
His under jaw dropped.
Then he nervously shoveled biscuits at me.
Jones grabbed my hand and cried out with a voice that was new to me.
You can eat? You're better? You'll get over it.
Sure, why carbolic acid never faces me.
I've often used it for rattlesnake bites.
I did not tell you, but that rattler at the cabin last night actually bit me,
and I used carbolic to cure the poison.
Frank mumbled something about horses and faded into the gloom.
As for Jones, he looked at me rather incredulously, and the absolute, almost childish gladness
he manifested because I had been snatched from the grave, made me regret my deceit, and satisfied me
forever on one score. On awakening in the morning I found frost half an inch thick covered my sleeping
bag, whitened the ground, and made the beautiful silver spruce trees silver in hue as well as
in name. We were getting ready for an early start, when two riders with packhorse
jogging after them, came down a trail from the direction of Oak Spring.
They proved to be Jeff Clark, the wild horse wrangler,
mentioned by the Stuarts and his helper.
They were on the way into the brakes for a string of pentos.
Clark was a short, heavily bearded man of jovial aspect.
He said he had met the stewards going into Fredonia,
and being advised of our destination had already to come up with us.
As we did not know, except in a general way,
where we were making for,
the meeting was a fortunate event.
Our camping side had been close to the divide
made by one of the long wooded ridges
sent off by a buckskin mountain.
And soon we were descending again.
We rode half a mile down a timbered slope
and then into a beautiful flat forest of gigantic pines.
Clark informed us,
it was a level bench,
some ten miles long running out over the slopes of buckskin
to face the Grand Canyon on the south.
and the brakes of the sea wash on the west for two hours we rode between the stately lines of trees and the hoofs of the horses gave forth no sound
a long silvery grass sprinkled with smiling bluebells covered the ground except close under the pines where soft red mats invited lounging and rest we saw numerous deer great gray mule deer almost as large as elk jones said they had been crossed with elk once which accounted for their sons
eyes. I did not see a stump or a burned tree or a windfall during the ride. Clark led us to the
rim of the canyon. Without any preparation for the giant trees hid the open sky, we rode right out to the
edge of the tremendous chasm. At first I did not seem to think. My faculties were benumbed. Only the pure
sensorial instinct of the savage who sees but does not feel made me take note of the abyss.
Not one of our party had ever seen the canyon from this side, and not one of us said a word.
But Clark kept talking.
Wild place this is here, he said.
Seldon many one but horse wranglers gets over this far.
I've had a bunch of wild pintoes down in a canyon below for two years.
I reckon you can't find no better place for camp than right here.
Listen, do you hear that rumble?
That's Thunderfalls.
You can only see it from one place, and that far off.
But there's Brooks you can get to water the horses.
For that matter, you can ride up the slopes and get snow.
If you can get snow close, it'd be better,
for that's an all-fired bad trail down for water.
Is this the cougar country that Stuart's talked about? asked Jones.
Wreckin' it is.
Cougars is as thick in here as rabbits in a springhole canyon.
I'm on the way now to bring up my pentos.
Cougars have cost me hundreds.
I might say thousands of dollars.
I lose horses all the time.
And damn me, gentlemen, I've never raised a colt.
This is the greatest cougar country in the west.
Look at those yellow crags.
There's where cougars stay.
No one ever hunted them.
Seems to me they can't be hunted.
Deer and wild horses by the thousand brows here,
in the mountain in summer and down in their breaks in winter.
Cooters live fat.
You'll find deer and wild hawshockerses.
All over this country.
You'll find lions dens full of bones.
You'll find warm deer left for the coyotes.
But whether you'll find the cougars, I can't say.
I fetch dogs in here and tried to catch old Tom.
I've put them on his trail and never saw hide nor hair of them again.
Jones, it's no easy hunting here.
here. Well, I can see that, replied our leader. I never hunted lions in such a country and never
knew anyone who had. We'll have to learn how. We've the time and the dogs. All we need is the stuff in us.
I hope you fell in get some cougars, and I believe you will. Whatever you do kill old Tom.
We'll catch him alive. We're not on a hunt to kill cougars, said Jones. What? exclaimed Clark.
looking from Jones to us.
His rugged face wore a half-smile.
Joe's ropes coogers and ties them up, replied Frank.
I'm...
He'll never rope old Tom burst out, Clark,
ejecting a huge quid of tobacco.
Why, I'm man alive.
It'd be the death of you to get near that old villain.
I never seen him, but I've seen his tracks for five years.
They're larger than any host-a-hastrook.
tracks you ever seen. He'll weigh over 300, that old cougar. Here, take a look at my man's
horse. Look at it back. See them marks? Well, old Tom made them, and he made them right in camp last fall,
when we were down in the canyon. The Mustang to which Clark called our attention was a sleek
cream and white pinto. Upon his side and back were long, regular scars, some an inch wide and
bear of hair. How on earth did he get rid of the cougar? asked Jones. I don't know.
Perhaps got scared of the dogs. It took that pin of a year to get well. Old Tom is a real lion.
You'll kill full-grown hawks when he wants, but a yearling colt is his special liking.
You're sure to run across this trail, and you'll never miss it. Well, if I find any cougar sign
down in the canyon, I'll build two fires, so to let you know. Don't know how to know. Don't know how to
are intolerably acquainted with the vermouths.
The deer and hosses are ranging the four slopes now,
and I think the cougars come up over the rim rock at night
and go back in the mountain.
Anyway, if your dogs can follow the trails,
you've got sport, and mourn sport coming to you.
But take it from me.
Don't try to rope old Tom.
After all our disappointments in the beginning of the expedition,
our hardship on the desert, our trials,
with the dogs and horses, it was real pleasure to make permanent camp with wood, water,
and feet at hand, a soul-stirring, ever-changing picture before us,
and the certainty that we were in the wild lairs of the lions, among the lords of the crags.
While we were unpacking every now and then, I would straighten up and gaze out beyond.
I knew the outlook was magnificent and sublimbly beyond words,
but as yet I had not begun to understand it.
The great pine trees growing to the very edge of the rim
received their full quota of appreciation from me,
as did the smooth flower-decked aisles, leading back into the forest.
The location we selected for camp was a large glade,
50 paces or more from the precipice,
far enough the cowboys of Virtue,
to keep our traps from being sucked down by some of the whirlpool winds,
native to the spot.
In the center of this glade stood a huge, gnarled and blasted old pine,
but certainly by virtue of hoary locks and bent shoulders had earned the right to stand aloof
from his younger companions.
Under this tree, we placed all our belongings,
and then, as Franks so falliciously expressed it,
we were free to ooze around and see things.
I believe I had a sort of subconscious, selfish idea
that someone would steal a canyon away from me if I did not hurry to make it mine forever.
So I sneaked off and sat under a pine growing on the very rim.
At first glance, I saw below me seemingly miles away,
a wide chaos of red and bluff maces, rising out of dark purple clefts.
Beyond these reared a long irregular table-land,
running south almost to the extent of my vision,
which I remembered Clark had called Powell's Plateau.
I remembered also that he had said it was 20 miles distant,
It was almost that many miles long, was connected to the mainland of Buckskin Mountain,
by a very narrow wooded dip of land called the saddle,
and that it practically shut us out of a view of the Grand Canyon proper.
If that was true, what then could be the name of the canyon at my feet?
Suddenly, as my gaze wandered from point to point,
it was arrested by a dark conical mountain, white-tipped,
which rose in the notch of the saddle.
What could it mean?
Were there such things as canyon mirages?
Then the dim purple of its color
told of its great distance from me,
and then its familiar shape told I had come into my own again.
I had found my old friend once more.
For in all that plateau,
there was only one snow-capped mountain, the San Francisco Peak,
and there, 150, perhaps 200 miles away,
far beyond the Grand Canyon.
It smiled brightly at me,
as it had for days and days across the desert.
Hearing Jones yelling for somebody or everybody,
I jumped up to find a procession
heading for a point further down the rim wall,
where our leader stood waving his arms,
the excitement proved to have been caused by cougar signs
at the head of the trail where Clark had started down.
They're here, boys, they're here.
Jones kept repeating,
as he showed us different tracks.
The sign is not that old.
Boys, tomorrow we'll get up a lion.
Sure as you're born.
And if we do and Sounder sees him,
then we've got a lion dog.
I'm afraid of Don.
He has a fine nose.
He can run and fight.
But he's been trained to deer
and maybe I can't break him.
Mose is still uncertain.
If old Jude only hadn't been leaned,
she would be the best of the lot.
But Sounder is our hope.
I'm almost ready to swear by him.
All this was too much for me,
so I slipped off again to be alone,
and this time,
headed for the forest,
warm patches of sunlight like gold,
brightened the ground,
dark patches of sky like ocean blue,
gleamed between the treetops.
Hardly a rustle of wind
and the fine-tooth green branches
disturbed the quiet.
When I got fully out of sight of the camp,
I started to run as if I were a wild Indian.
My running had no aim,
just sheer mass.
had joy of the grand old forest.
The smell of pine, the wild silence and beauty
loosed a spirit in me, so it had to run.
And I ran with it till the physical being failed,
while resting on a fragrant bed of pine needles,
endeavoring to gain control over a truant mind,
trying to subdue the encroaching of the natural man
on civilized man,
I saw gray objects moving under the trees.
I lost them, then saw them,
and presently so plainly that with delight on
on delight. I counted seventeen deer passed through an open arch of dark green. Rising to my feet,
I ran to get round a low mound. They saw me and bounded away with prodigiously long leaps.
Bringing their four feet together, stiff-legged, under them they bounced high like rubber balls,
yet they were graceful. The forest was so open that I could watch them for a long way, and as I
circled my gaze, a glimpse of something white arrested my attention. A light, grace animal appeared to be
tearing at an old stump.
Upon your view, I recognized a wolf,
and he scented or sighted me at the same moment
and loped off into the shadows of the trees.
Approaching the spot where I had marked him
and found he had been feeding from the carcass of a horse.
The remains had only been partially eaten
and were of an animal of the Mustang build
that had evidently been recently killed.
Frightful lacerations under the throat
showed where a lion had taken fatal hold.
Deep furrows in the ground proved how the Mustang had sunk his hoofs, reared and shaken himself.
I traced roughly defined tracks fifty paces to the lee of the little bank, from which I concluded the lion had sprung.
I gave free rein to my imagination and saw the forest dark, silent, peopled by none, but at savage Densians.
The lion crept like a shadow, crouched noiselessly down, then lit on a sleeping or browsing prey.
The lonely night stillness split to a frantic snort and scream of terror,
and the stricken Mustang with his mortal enemy upon his back,
dashed off with fierce, wild love of life.
As he went he felt his foe crawl towards his neck on claws of fire.
He saw the tawny-pody and the gleaming eyes.
Then the cruel teeth snapped with sudden bite,
and the woodland tragedy ended.
On the spot I conceived an antipathy towards lions,
It was born of the frightful spectacle of what had once been a glossy prancing Mustang,
of the mute sickening proof of the survival of the fittest, of the law that levels life.
Upon telling my camp followers about my discovery, Jones and Wallace walked out to see it,
while Jim told me the wolf I had seen was a loafer, one of the giant buffalo wolves of buckskin,
and if I would watch the carcass in mornings and evenings,
I would sure as hell get a plunk at him.
White pine burned in a beautiful, clear, blue flame with no smoke,
and in the center of the campfire left a golden heart,
but Jones would not have any sitting up and hustled us off to bed,
saying we would be blamed glad of it in fifteen hours.
I crawled into my sleeping bag,
made a hood of my Navajo blanket,
and peeping from under it,
watched the fire in flickering shadows.
The blaze burned down rapidly, then the stars blinked.
Arizona stars would be moons in any other state.
How serene, peaceful, August, infinite, and wonderfully bright.
No breeze stirred the pines.
The clear tinkle of the cowbells on the hobbled horses rang from near and distant parts of the forest.
The proassic bell of the meadow and the pasture brook here in this environment jingled out different notes.
this clear, sweet musical is silver bells.
End of Chapter 11.
Chapter 12 of The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray.
This Liebervox recording is in the public domain.
Recording by Mike Vendetti, Mike Vendetti.com.
The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 12, Old Tom.
At daybreak, our leader rotted us out.
The frost mottled the ground so heavily that it looked like snow
and the rare atmosphere bit like the breath of winter.
The forest stood solemn and gray.
The canyon lay wrapped in vapory slumber.
Hot biscuits and coffee,
with a chopper two of the delicious Persian lamb meat,
put a less spartant tinge on the morning,
and gave Wallace and me more strength.
We needed not incentive to leave the fire,
hustle our saddles on the horses,
and get in line with our impatient leader.
The hounds scampered over the frost,
shoving their noses at the tufts of grass and bluebells.
Lawson and Jim remained in camp.
The rest of us trooped southwest.
A mile or so in that direction, the forest of pine ended abruptly,
and a wide belt of low scrubby oak trees,
pressed high to a horse, fringed the rim of the canyon,
and appeared to broaden out and grow wavy southward.
The edge of the forest was as dark and regular
as if a band of woodchoppers had trimmed it.
We threaded our way through this thicket, all peering into the bisecting deer trails for cougar tracks in the dust.
Bring the dogs, hurry, suddenly called Jones from a thicket.
We lost no time complying and found him standing in a trail with his eyes on the sand.
Take a look, boys.
A good-sized male cougar passed here last night.
Here, sounder, dawn, moose, come on!
It was a nervous, excited pack of hounds.
old Jude got to Jones first, and she sang out, then Sounder opened his big, ringing bay,
and before Jones could mount, a string of yelping dogs sailed straight for the forest.
"'Who's along, boys?' yelled Frank Wheeling Spot.
With the cowboy leading we strung into the pines, and I found myself behind.
Presently even Wallace disappeared.
I almost threw the reins at Satan, and yelled for him to go.
The result enlightened me, like I'm a night.
arrow from a bow, the black shot forward. Frank had told me of his speed that when he found his
stride it was like riding a flying feather to be on him. Jones fearing he would kill me,
had cautioned he always to hold him in, which I had done. Satan stretched out with long,
graceful motions. He did not turn aside for logs, but cleared them with easy and powerful spring,
and he swerved only slightly for the trees. This latter I saw,
at once made the danger for me.
It became a matter of saving my legs and dodging branches.
The imperative need of this came to me with convincing force.
I dodged a branch on one tree, only to be caught square in the middle by a snag on another.
Crack!
If the snag had not broken, Satan would have gone on riderless,
and I would have been left hanging a pathetic and drooping monoton to the risks of the hunt.
I kept ducking my head now and then falling flat over the pommel to avoid a limb that would
have brushed me off and hugging the flanks of my horse with my knees.
Soon I was at Wallace's heels and had Jones in sight.
Now and then glimpses of Frank's white horse gleamed through the trees.
We began to circle toward the south, to go up and down shallow hollow hollows,
to find the pines thinning out, then we shot out of the forest into the scrubby oak,
Riding through this brush was the cruelest kind of work,
but Satan kept on close to the sorrel.
The hollows began to get deeper and the ridges between them narrower.
No longer could we keep a straight course.
On the crest of one of these ridges we found Jones awaiting us.
Judge, Tigg, and Don lay panting on his feet.
Plainly, the colonel appeared vexed.
Listen, he said, when he rained in.
We complied, but did not hear a sound.
Frank's beyond there someplace, continued Jones, but I can't seem nor hear the hounds anymore.
Don and Teague split again on deer trails. Old Jude hung on the lion track,
but I stopped her here. There's something I can't figure. Moes held a bee-line southwest,
and he yelled seldom. Sounder gradually stopped being. Maybe Frank can tell us something.
Jones's long-drawn-out signal was answered from the direction he expected,
and after a little time, Frank's white horse shone out of the ground.
gray green of a ridge a mile away.
This drew my attention to our position.
We were on a high ridge out in the open,
and I could see fifty miles of the shaggy slopes of buckskin.
Southward the gray ragged lines seemed to stop suddenly
and beyond it purple haze hung over a void I knew to be the canyon,
and facing west I came to at last to understand perfectly
the meaning of the brakes in the seawash.
They were nothing more than ravines that headed up on the slopes and ran down.
getting deeper and steeper, though scarcely wider, to break into the canyon.
Knife-crested ridges rolled westward wave-on-wave, like the billows of a sea.
I appreciated that these breaks were at their sources, little washes easy to jump across,
and at their mouths, a mile deep and impassable.
Huge pine trees shaded these gullies to give way to the gray growth of stunted oak,
which in turn merged into the dark green of pinion.
A wonderful country for deer and lions, it seemed to me, but impassable, all but impossible for a hunter.
Frank soon appeared, brushing through the bending oaks, and Sounder trotted along behind him.
Where's Moes? inquired Jones.
Last I heard of Moes, he was out on the brush going across the pinion flat, right for the canyon.
He had a hot trail.
Well, we're certain for one thing. If it was a deer, he won't come back soon, and if it was a lion, he'll tree it.
lose the scent and come back.
We've got to show the hounds a lion in a tree.
They'd run a hot trail, bump into a tree,
and then be at fault.
What was wrong with Sounder?
I don't know.
Came back to me.
We can't trust him or any of them yet.
Still, maybe they're doing better than we know.
The outcome of the chase so favorably started
was a disappointment,
which we all felt keenly.
After some discussion,
we turned south, intending to ride down to the rim wall
and follow it back to the camp.
I happened to turn once, perhaps, to look again
at the far distant pink cliffs of Utah,
or the wave-like dome of Trumbull Mountain.
When I saw Moes trailing close behind me,
my yell halted the colonel.
Well, be darned, jackulated he,
as Moes hove in sight.
Come here, old rascal.
He was a tired dog, but had no sheepish air about him,
such as he had worn when lagging in from deer chases.
He wagged his tail and flopped down to pant and pant,
as if to say,
What wrong are you guys?
Boys, for two cents I'd go back and put Jude on that trail.
It's just possible that Moes treat a lion.
But, well, I expect there's more likelihood of his chasing the lion over the rim.
So we may as well keep on.
The strange thing is that Sounder wasn't with Moes.
There may have been two lions.
You see, we are up a tree ourselves.
I've known lions to run in pairs and also a mother to keep four,
two-year-olds with her. But such cases are rare. Here in this country, though maybe they run around
and have parties. As we left the brakes behind, we got out upon a level pinion flat. A few cedars grew
within the pinions, deer runways, and trails were thick. Boy, look at that, said Jones.
This is great lying country, the best I ever saw. Pointed to the sunken red shapeless remains
of two horses, and near them a ghastly scattering of bleached bones.
A lion-layer, right here on the flat.
Those two horses were killed early this morning,
see no signs of the carcasses having been covered with brush or dirt.
I've got to learn lion lore over again, that's certain.
As we paused at the head of the Depression,
which appeared to be a gap in the rim wall,
filled with masked pinions and splintered piles of yellow stone,
I caught Sounder going through some interesting moves.
He stopped the smell of bush, then he lifted his head and electrified me with a great,
deep-sounding bay.
Hi there, listen to that, yelled Jones.
What Sounder got? Give him room. Don't run him down.
Easy now, old dog. Easy, easy, easy, easy.
Sounder suddenly broke down a trail.
Moes howled, Don barked, and Teague led out his staccato yelp.
They ran through the bush here, there everywhere.
Then all at once, old Jude chimed in with her mellow voice,
and Jones tumbled off his horse.
"'By the Lord Harry, there's something here.'
"'Here, Colonel. Here's the brush,' Sounder smelt.
"'And there's a sandy trail under, I called.'
"'There go Don and Teague down into the break,' cried Frank.
"'They've got a hot scent.'
Jones stooped over the place I designated to jerk up with a reddening face,
as he flung himself onto the saddle roared out.
After Sounder, old Tom, old Tom, old Tom.
We all heard Sounder, and at the moment of Jones'
discovery, Moes got dissent and plunged ahead of us.
Aye, aye, aye, aye, yelled the colonel.
Frank Sents bought forward like a white streak.
Sounder called to us in irresistible bays, which Moes answered,
and then crippled jude, bade in baffled, impotent distress.
The atmosphere was charged with that lion.
As if by magic, the excitation communicated itself to all,
and men, horses, and dogs reacted in accord.
The ride through the forest had been a jaunt.
This was a steeplechase, a mad, heedless, perilous, glorious race.
And we had, for a pacemaker, a cowboy mounted on a tireless Mustang.
Always it seemed to me, while the wind rushed, the brush whipped.
I saw Frank far ahead, sitting his saddle as if glued there, holding his reins loosely forward.
To see him ride was a beautiful sight.
Jones let out his Comanche yell at every dozen jumps,
and Wallace sent back a thrilling Wahoo.
In the excitement, I again checked my horse,
and when I remembered, I loosed the bridle.
How the noble animal responded.
The pace he settled into dazed me.
I could hardly distinguish the deer trail down which he was thundering.
I lost my comrades ahead.
The pinion blurred in my sight.
I only faintingly heard the hounds.
It occurred to me.
We were making for the brakes.
But I did not think of checking Satan.
I thought only of flying on faster and faster.
On, on, old fellow, stretch out.
Never lose this race.
We've got to be there at the finish, I called to Satan,
and he seemed to understand and stretch lower, further, quicker.
The brush pounded my legs and clutched and tore my clothes.
The wind whistled, the pinion branches cut and whipped my face.
Once I dodged to the left as Satan swerved to the right,
with the result that I flew out of the saddle and crashed into a pinion tree,
which marvelously brushed me back into the saddle.
The wild yells and deep bays sounded nearer.
Satan tripped and plunged down,
throwing me as gracefully as an aerial tumbler,
wings his light.
I lighted in a bush.
Without feeling a scratch or pain,
as Satan recovered and ran past,
I did not seek to make him stop,
but getting a good grip on the pommel,
I vaulted up again.
Once more he raced like a wild Mustang.
And from nearer and nearer in front
peeled the alluring sounds of the chase.
Satan was creeping close to Wallace and Joan,
with frank looming white through the occasional pinions.
Then all dropped out his sight to appear again suddenly.
They had reached the first break.
Soon I was upon it.
Two deer ran out of the ravine almost brushing my horse in the haste.
Satan went down and up in a few giant strides.
Only the narrow ridge separated us from another break.
It was up and down.
Then for Satan, a work to which he manfully set himself.
Occasionally I saw Wallace and Jones,
but heard them oftener.
All the time the brakes grew deeper,
till finally Satan had to zigzag his way down and up.
Discouragement fastened on me,
when from the summit of the next ridge I saw Frank far down the break,
with Jones and Wallace not a quarter of a mile away from him.
I sent out a long, exultant yell
as Satan crashed into the hard dry wash at the bottom of the break.
I knew from the way he quickened under me
that he intended to overhaul somebody,
perhaps because of the clear going
or because my frenzy had cooled
to a thrilling excitement,
which permitted detail I saw clearly
and distinctly the speeding horsemen
down the ravine.
I picked out the smooth pieces of ground ahead
and with the slightest touch of the rain on his neck
guided Satan into them,
how he ran.
The light, quick beats of his hooves
were regular, pounding.
Seeing Jones and Wallace sail high in the air,
I knew they had jumped a ditch.
Thus prepared, I managed to stick on when it yawned before me,
and Satan never slacking, lipped up and up, giving me a new swing.
Dust began to settle in little clouds before me.
Frank far ahead had turned his Mustang up the side of the brake.
Wallace, with inhaling distance now, turned to wave me a hand.
The rushing wind fairly sang in my ears.
The walls of the brake were confused, blurs of yellow and green.
At every stride, Satan seemed to swallow a rod of the white trail.
Jones began to scale a ravine, heading up obliquely,
far on the side to where Frank had vanished,
and as Wallace followed suit,
I turned Satan, I caught Wallace at the summit,
and we raced together out upon another flat of pinion.
We heard Frank and Jones yelling in a way
that caused us to spur our horses frantically.
Spot, gleaming white, near a clump of green pinions,
was our guiding star.
That last quarter of a mile was a ringing run, a ride to remember.
As our mounts crashed back with stiff forelegs and haunches,
Wallace and I leapt off and darted into the clump of pinions,
whence issued a hair-raising melody of yells and barks.
I saw Jones, then Frank, both waving their arms,
when mows and sounder running wildly am you'll see about.
Look there, rang in my ear,
and Jones smashed me on the back with a blow,
which at any ordinary time would have laid me flat.
In the low stubby pinion trees scarce twenty feet from us,
was a tawny form.
An enormous mountain lion as large as an African lioness
stood planted with huge, round legs on two branches,
and he faced us gloomily.
Neither frightened nor fierce.
He watched the running dogs with pale yellow eyes,
waved his massive head and switching a long, black, tough tail.
It's old Tom.
Sure as you're born, it's old Tom, yelled Jones.
There are no two lions like that in one country.
Hold still now.
Jude is here.
and she'll see him. She'll show him to the other hounds. Hold still. We heard Jude coming at a fast pace
for a lame dog, and we saw her presently running with her nose down for a moment, then up.
She entered the clump of trees and bumped her nose against the pinion, old Tom was in,
and looked up like a dog that knew her business. The series of wild howls she broke into
quickly brought Sounder and mows to her side. They too saw the big lion not 15 feet over their heads.
We were all yelling and trying to talk at once, in some such state as the dogs.
Here, Moes, come down out of that!
Worse he shot at Jones.
Moes had begun to climb the thick, mini-branched low-pinion tree.
He paid not the slightest attention to Jones, who screamed and raged at him.
Cover the lion, cried he to me.
Don't shoot unless he crouches to jump on me.
The little beaded front-sight wavered slightly as I held my rifle leveled at the grim, snarling face,
and out of the corner of my eye,
as it were, I saw Jones
dash in under the lion and grasp mows
by the hind leg and hauling down.
He broke from Jones and leaped again
into the first low branch.
His master then grasped his collar
and carried him to where he stood
and held him choking.
Boys, we can't keep Tom up there.
When he jumps, keep out of his way.
Maybe we can chase him up a better tree.
Old Tom suddenly left the branches,
swinging violently and hitting the ground like a huge cat on springs.
He bounded off.
tail up, in a most ludicrous manner. His running, however, did not lack speed, for he quickly
outdistanced the bursting hounds. A stampede for horses succeeded this move. I had difficulty
in closing my camera, which I had forgotten until the last moment, and got behind the others.
Satan sent the dust flying, and the pinion branches crashing. Hardly I had I time to bewail my
ill luck in being left, when I dashed out of a quick growth of trees to come upon my companions,
all dismounted on the rim of the Grand Canyon.
He's gone down, he's gone down,
Rage Jones stomping the ground.
What luck! What miserable luck!
But don't quit.
Spread along the rim, boys, and look for him.
Cougars can't fly.
There's a break in the rim somewhere.
The rock wall on which we dizzily stood
dropped straight down for a thousand feet.
To meet a long pinion-covered slope,
which created a mile to cut off into what must have been
the second wall. We were far west of Clark's Trail now, and faced a point above where
Kanab Canyon, a red gorge, a mild deep, met the Great Canyon. As I ran along the rim,
looking for a fissure or break, my gaze seemed impellingly drawn by the immensity of this thing I could
not name, and for which I had no intelligible emotion. Two Wahus in a rear turned me back in
double-quick time, and hastening by the horses, I found the three men grouped at the head of a
narrow break. He went down there, Wallace saw him around the base of that tottering crag.
The brake was wedge-shaped, with the sharp end toward the rim, and it descended so rapidly as
to appear almost perpendicular. It was a long, steep slide of small weathered shale in a place that
no man in his right senses would have ever considered going down, but Jones, designating Frank
and me, said in his cool, quick voice, you fellows go down, take Judin's sounder in leash. If you
find his trail below along the wall, yelled to us. Meanwhile, Wallace and I will hang over the
rim and watch for him. Going down in one sense was much easier than had appeared. For the reason that
once started, we moved on sliding beds of weathered stone. Each of us now had an avalanche for a steed.
Frank forged ahead with a roar, and then, seeing danger below, tried to get out of the mass, but the stones
were like quicksand, every step he took, sunk him in deeper. He grasped the smooth cliff to find
holding impossible. The slide poured over a fall like so much water. He reached and caught a branch
of opinion, and lifting his feet up, hung on till the treacherous area of moving stones had passed.
While I had been absorbed in his predicament, my avalanche augmented itself by slide-on-slide,
perhaps loosened by his, and before I knew it, I was sailing down with ever-increasing momentum.
The sensation was distinctly pleasant and a certain spirit before restrained in me
at last ran riot.
The slide narrowed at the drop where Frank had jumped,
and the stones poured over in the stream.
I jumped also, but having a rifle in one hand,
failed to hold, and plunged down into the slide again.
My feet were held this time as in a vice.
I kept myself upright and waited.
Fortunately, the jumble of loose stone slowed and stopped,
enabled me to crawl over to one side,
where there was comparatively good footing.
Below us for 50 yards was a sheet of rough,
stone, as bare as washed granite well could be. We slid down this in regular schoolboy fashion
and had reached another restricted neck in the fissure when a sliding crash above
warned us that the avalanches had decided to move of their own free will. Only a fraction of a
moment had we to find footing along the yellow cliff, when with a crackling roar the mass struck
the slippery granite. If we had been on that slope our lives would not have been worth a grain of dust,
flying in clouds above us.
Huge stones that had formed the bottom of the slides were shot ahead
and rolling, leaping, whizzed by us with frightful velocity,
and the remainder groaned and growled its way down
to thunder over the second fall and die out in a distant rumble.
The hounds had hung back and were not easily coaxed down to us.
From there on, down to the base of the gigantic cliff,
we descended with little difficulty.
We might meet the old gray cat anywhere along here, said Frank.
The wall of yellow limestone had shelves, ledges, fissures, and cracks,
any one of which might have concealed a lion.
On these places I turned dark, uneasy glances.
It seemed to me events succeeded one another so rapidly
that I had no time to think to examine to prepare.
We were rushed from one sensation to another.
Hey, look here, said Frank.
Here's his tracks.
Did you ever see the like of that?
Certainly I had never fixed my eyes on such enormous cat tracks
as appeared in the yellow dust at the base of the rim wall.
The mere sight of them was sufficient to make a man tremble.
Hold in the dogs, Frank, called.
Listen, I think I heard a yell.
From far above came a yell,
which, though thinned out by distance,
was easily recognized as Joneses.
We returned to the opening of the break
and throwing our heads back,
looked up the side of the side,
slide to see him coming down.
Wait for me! Wait for me!
I saw the lion go in a cave. Wait for me!
With the same roar and crack and slide of rocks,
as had attended our descent,
Jones bore down on us. For an old man,
it was a marvelous performance.
He walked on the avalanche as though he wore seven-league boots,
and presently as we began to dodge whizzing boulders.
He stepped down to us, whirling his corded lasso.
His jaw bulged out, a flash-made
fire in his cold eyes.
Boys, we got old Tom in the corner.
I worked along the rim north and looked over every place I could.
Now, maybe you won't believe it, but I heard him pant.
Yes, sir, he panted, like the tired lion he is.
Well, presently I saw him lying along the base of the rim wall.
His tongue was hanging out.
You see, he's a heavy lion and not used to running long distances.
Come on now.
It's not far.
Hold in the dogs.
You there with the rifle?
lead off, and keep your eyes peeled.
Single file we passed along the shadow of the great cliff,
a wide trail, had been worn in the dust, a lion runway, said Jones.
Don't you smell the cat?
Indeed, the strong order of cat was very pronounced,
and that, without the big, fresh tracks,
made the skin of my face tighten and chill.
As we turned, a jutting point in the wall,
a number of animals which I did not recognize,
plunged helter-skelter down the canyon slope.
"'Rocky mountain sheep!' exclaimed Jones.
"'Look, well, this is a discovery.
I never heard of a big horn in the canyon.
It was indicative of the strong grip old Tom had on us
that we at once forgot the remarkable fact
of coming upon these rare sheep in such a place.
Jones halted us presently before a deep curve described
by the rim wall, the extreme end of which
terminated across the slope in an impassable projecting corner.
Did you cross there, boys?
See that black hole?
Old Tom's in there.
Much plan, queried the cowboy sharply.
Wait, we'll slip up to get better lie of the land.
We worked our way noiselessly along the rim wall curve for several hundred yards
and came to a halt again, this time with the splendid command of this situation.
The trail ended abruptly at the dark cave,
so menacing at us and the corner of the cliff had curled back upon itself.
It was a box trap.
with a drop at the end too great for any beast,
a narrow slide of weathered stone running down
and the rim wall of trail.
Old Tom would plainly be compelled
to choose one of these directions
if he left his cave.
Frank, you and I will keep to the wall
and stop near the scrub pinion this side of the hole.
If I rope him, I can use that tree.
Then he turned to me.
Are you to be dependent on here?
Why?
What do you want me to do?
I demanded, and my whole breast seemed to sink,
can. You cut across the head of this slope and take up your position in the slide below the cave.
Say just by that big stone. From there you can command the cave, our position, and your own.
Now, if it is necessary to kill this lion to save me or Frank or, of course, yourself,
can you be dependent upon to kill him? Felt a queer sensation about my heart and a strange
tightening of the skin upon my face. What a position for me to be placed in. For one,
One instant I shook like a quavering aspen leaf.
Then because of the pride of a man or perhaps inherited instincts, cropping out of this perilous
moment, I looked up and answered quietly, Yes, I will kill him.
Old Tom is cornered and he'll come out.
He can run only two ways along this trail or down that slide.
I'll take my stand by the scrub pinion there so I can get a hitch if I rope him.
Frank, when I give you a word, let the dogs go.
Gray, you block the slide.
If he makes Addis, even if I do get my rope on him.
Kill him.
Most likely he'll jump downhill.
Then you'll have to kill him.
Be quick.
Now lose the hound.
Hi, aye, hi, hi.
I jumped into the narrow slide of weathered stones and looked up.
Joan Centoria Niel rose high above the clamor of the hounds.
He whirled his lassoe.
A huge yellow form shot over the trail and hit the top of the slide with a crash.
The lassoos streaked out with arrowy swiftness, circled and snapped viciously close to old Tom's head.
Kill him!
Kill him!
Roared Jones.
Then the lion leaped seemingly into the air above me.
Instinctively, I raised my little automatic rifle.
I seemed to hear a million bellowing reports.
The tawny body, with its grim, snarling face, burred in my sight.
I heard a roar of sliding stones at my feet.
I felt a rush of wind.
I caught a confused glimpse of a whirling wheel of fur, rolling down his life.
Then Jones and Franks were pounding on me and yelling,
I know not what.
From far above came floating down along Wahoo.
I saw Wallace silhouetted against the blue sky,
felt the hot barrel of my rifle,
and shuddered at the bloody stones below me.
Then, and only then,
did I realize with weakening legs
that old Tom had just jumped at me,
and it jumped to his death.
End of Chapter 12.
Chapter 13 of the last of the plains,
and by Zane Gray. This
Supervox recording is in the public domain, recording
by Mike Vendetti, Mike Vendetti.com.
The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray
Chapter 13
Singing Cliffs
Old Tom had rolled 200 yards
down the canyon, leaving a red trail and bits of
fur behind him. When I had clambered
down to this steep slide where he had lodged,
Sounder and Jude had just decided he was no longer
worth biting, and were wagging her tail.
else. Frank was shaking his head and Joan standing above the lion, lasso in hand, wore a disconsolate
face. Oh, I wish I had got a rope on him. I reckon we'd be gathering up the pieces of you
if you had, said Frank dryly. We skinned the old king on the rocky slope of his mighty throne
and then, beginning to feel the effects of severe exertion, we got across the slope for the foot
of the break. Once there, we gazed up in dismay.
That break resembled a walk of life.
How easy to slip down are hard to climb.
Even Frank, inured as he was to strenuous toil,
began to swear and wipe his sweaty brow
before we had made one-tenth of the ascent.
It was particularly exasperating,
not to mention the danger of it,
to work a few feet up a slide and then feel it start to move.
We had to climb in single file
which jeopardized the safety of those behind the leader.
Sometimes we were all sliding at once like boys on a pond,
with the difference that we were in danger.
Frank forged ahead, turning to yell now and then
for us to dodge a cracking stone.
Faithful old Jude could not get up in some places,
so laying aside my rifle I carried her,
and returned for the weapon.
It became necessarily presently to hide behind cliff projections
to escape the avalanches started by Frank,
and to wait till he had surmounted the break.
Jones gave out completely several times, saying the exertion affected his heart.
What with my rifle, my camera, and Jude, I could offer him no assistance and was really in need of that myself,
when it seemed as if one more step would kill us.
We reached the rim and fell patting with labored chests and dripping skins.
We could not speak.
Jones had worn a pair of ordinary shoes without thick soles and nails,
and it seemed well to speak of them in the past tense.
They were split into ribbons and hung on by the laces.
His feet were cut and bruised.
On the way back to camp, we encountered Mose and Don,
coming out of the break where we had started, sound around the trail.
The paws of both hounds were yellow with dust,
which proved they had been down under the rim wall.
Jones doubted not in the least that they had chased a lion.
Upon examination, this break proved to be one of the two
which Clark used for trails to his wild horse corral in the canyon.
According to him, the distance separating them was five miles by the rim wall,
and less than half that in a straight line.
Therefore, we made for the point of the forest where it ended abruptly in the scrub oak.
We got to camp a fatigued lot of men, horses and dogs.
Jones appeared particularly happy, and his first move, after dismounting,
was to stretch out the lion's skin and measure it.
Ten feet three inches and a half, he sang out.
Sure do beat hell, exclaimed Jim, in tones nearer to excitement than any I had ever heard him use.
Old Tom beats by two inches any cougar I ever saw, continued Jones.
He must have weighed more than 300.
We'll set about curing the hide.
Jim, stretch it well on a tree and we'll take a hand and peeling off the fat.
All of the party worked on the cougar skin that afternoon.
The gristle at the base of the neck where it met the shoulders was so tough and thick we could not scrape it thin.
Jones said this particular spot was so well protected because in fighting,
cougars were most likely to bite and claw there.
For that matter, the whole skin was tough, tougher than leather,
and when it dried it pulled all the horseshoe nails out of the pine tree upon which we had it stretched.
About time for the sun to set, I strolled along the rim wall to look into the canyon.
I was beginning to feel something of its character and had growing impressions.
Dark purple smoke failed the cliffs deep down between the maces.
I walked along to where points of cliff ran out like capes and peninsulas.
All seemed, cracked, wrinkled, scarred, and yellow with age,
with shattered, toppling ruins of rocks, ready at a touch to go thundering down.
I could not resist a temptation to crawl out to the furthest point,
even though I shuddered over the yard-wide ridges.
And when once seated on a bare promontory
200 feet from the regular rim wall,
I felt isolated, marooned.
The sun, a liquid red globe,
had just touched its underside
to the pink cliffs of Utah
and fired a crimson flood of light
over the wonderful mountains, plateos,
scrapments, mesas, domes,
domes, and turrets of the gorge.
The rim wall of Powell's plateau,
was a thin streak of fire,
the timber above like grass
of gold, and the long slopes below
shaded from bright to dark.
Point sublime, bold and bare,
ran out towards the plateau,
jealously reaching for the sun.
Vast tomb, peeped over the saddle.
The temple of Ishu lay bathed
in vaporing, shading clouds,
an initial altar shone with rays of glory.
The beginning of the wondrous transformation,
the dropping of the day's curtain, was for me a rare and perfect moment.
As the golden splendor of sunset sought out a peak or mesa or escarpment,
I gave it a name to suit my fancy,
and as flushing fading its glory changed, sometimes I rechristened it.
Jupiter's chariot, brazen-wheeled, stood ready to roll into the crowds.
Simmers's bed, all gold shone from a tower of Babylon.
Kaster and Pollux clasped hands over a Starian River.
The spur of doom, a mountain shaft, is red as hell, and inaccessible, insurmountable, lured
with a strange light, dusk, a bold black dome, was shrouded by the shadow of a giant
mesa.
The star of Bethlehem glittered from the brow of point sublime.
The wraithed fleecy feathered curtain of mist.
down among the ruins of castles and palaces like the ghosts of a goddess, veils of twilight,
dim, dark ravines, mystic homes of spectres, led into the awful valley of the shadow, clothed in
purple night. Suddenly, as the first puff of the night wind faned my cheek, a strange, sweet, low,
moaning, and sighing came to my ears. I almost thought I was in a dream, but the canyon, now blood-red,
was there in overwhelming reality,
a profound, solemn, gloomy thing but real.
The wind blew stronger,
and then I was listening to a sad, sweet song,
which lulled as the wind lulled.
I realized at once that the sound was caused
by the wind blowing into the peculiar formations of the cliffs.
It changed, softened, shaded, mellowed,
but it was always sad.
It rose from low, tremulous, sweetly,
quivering sighs to a sound like the last woeful,
despiring whale of a woman.
It was the song of the sea sirens and the music of the waves.
It had the soft sow of the night wind in the trees
and the haunting moan of lost spirits.
With reluctance I turned my back to the gorgeous,
changing spectacle of the canyon and crawled into the rim wall.
At the narrow neck of stone I peered over to look down into misty blue
nothingness.
That night, Jones told stories of frightened hunters, and assaunched my mortification,
by saying buck fever, was pardonable after the danger had passed,
and especially so in my case, because of the great size and fame of old Tom.
The worst case of buck fever I ever saw was on a buffalo hunt I had with a fellow named Williams,
went on Jones.
I was one of the scouts leading the wagon train west on the old Santa Fe Trail.
This fella, he said he was a big hunter
and wanted to kill a buffalo, so I took him out.
I saw a herd making over the prairie
for a hollow where a brook ran,
and by hard work got in ahead of them.
Picked out a position just below the edge of the bank,
and we lay quiet waiting.
From the direction of the buffalo,
I calculated we'd be just about right to get a shot at,
no very long range.
As it was, I suddenly heard thumps on the ground
and cautiously rising my head,
saw a huge buffalo bull just over us,
not fifteen feet up the bank.
Whispered to Williams,
For God's sake, don't shoot, don't move.
The bull's fiery little eyes snapped, and he reared.
I thought we were gonars.
For when a bull comes down on anything with his four feet, it's done for.
But he slowly settled back, perhaps doubtful.
Then as another buffalo came along to the edge of the bank,
luckily, a little way from us,
the bull turned broadside.
presenting a splendid target.
Then I whispered to Williams.
Now's your chance, shoot!
I waited for the shot, but none came.
Looking at Williams, I saw that he was white and trembling.
Big drops of sweat stood out on his brow,
his teeth chattered, and his hands shook.
He had forgotten he carried a rifle.
That reminds me, said Frank.
They tell a story over at Knaub on a Dutchman named Schmidt.
He was very fond of hunting,
and I guess had pretty good security.
after deer and small game.
One winter he was out on a pink cliffs with a Mormon named Schoonover,
and they ran into a layman big grizzly track, fresh and wet.
They trailed him to a clump of chaparral,
and ongoing clear-rounded, found no tracks leading out.
Schoenover said Schmidt, commenced to sweat.
They went back to the place where the trail led in,
and there they were.
Great, big, silver-tip tracks,
"'Ber in horse tracks, so fresh that water was oozing out of them.'
"'Schmidt said,
"'Zeeke, you go in and get him.
"'I've toot sick right now.'
"'Hapy as we were over our chase of old Tom
"'and her prospects, for sounder Jude and Mose,
"'had seen a lion in a tree.
"'We sought our blankets early.
"'I lay watching the bright stars
"'and listening to the roar of the wind in the pines.
"'At intervals it lulled to a whisper,
and then swelled to a roar and then died away.
Far off in the forest a coyote barked once.
Time and time again, as I was gradually sinking into slumber,
the sudden roar of the wind startled me.
I imagined it was the crash of rolling weathered stone,
and I saw again that huge, outspread flying lion above me.
I awoke some time later to find Moes,
had sought the warmth of my side.
And he lay so near my arm that I reached out and covered him with the end of a blanket.
I used to break the wind.
It was very cold and the time must have been very late,
for the wind had died down, and I heard not a tinkle from the hobbled horses.
The absence of the cowbell music gave me a sense of loneliness,
for without it the silence of the great forest was a thing to be felt.
This oppressiveness, however, was broken by a far distant cry.
Unlike any sound I had ever heard.
I sure of myself, I freed my ears from the blanketed hood and listened.
It came again a wild cry that made me think first of a lost child,
and then of the morning wolf of the north.
It must have been a long distance off in the forest.
An interval of some moments passed.
Then it peaked out again, near this time,
and so human that it startled me.
Mose raised his head and growled low in his throat
and sniffed the keen air.
Jones, Jones, called,
reaching over to touch the old hunter.
He woke at once,
with the clear-headedness of the light-sleeper.
I heard the cry of some beast, I said,
and it was so weird, so strange,
I want to know what it was.
Such a long silence ensued
that I began to despair of hearing the cry again,
when with a suddenness
which straightened the hair on my head,
a wailing shriek,
Exactly like a despairing woman might give in death agony split the night's silence.
It seemed right on us.
Cougar, Cougar! exclaimed Jones.
What's up? Quirried Frank, awakened by the dogs.
Their howling roused the rest of the party and no doubt scared the cougar,
for his womanish scream was not repeated.
Then Jones got up and gathered his blankets in a roll.
We're using for now?
asked Frank sleepily.
I think that cougar just came up over the rim on a scouting hunt,
and I'm going to go down to the head of the trail and stay there till morning.
If he returns that way, I'll put him up a tree.
With this he unchained Sounder in dawn and stalked off under the trees,
looking like an Indian.
Once the deep bay of Sounder rang out, Jones's sharp command followed,
and then the familiar silence encompassed the forest and was broken known.
more. When I awoke, all was gray except toward the canyon. With a little bit of sky, I saw
through the pines glowed a delicate pink. I crawled out on the instant, got into my boots and
coat, and kicked up the smoldering fire. Jim heard me and said,
Sure, you're up early. I'm going to see the sunrise from the north rim of the Grand Canyon,
said, and knew when I spoke that very few men out of all the millions of travelers had ever
seen this, probably the most surpassingly beautiful pageant in the world. At most, only a few geologists,
scientists, perhaps an artist or two, and horse-ranglers, hunters and prospectors, have ever reached
the rim on the north side, and these men crossing from bright angel or mystic spring trails on the
south rim seldom or never got beyond Powell's Plateau. The frost cracked under my boots like
frail ice, and the bluebells peaked wanly from the white.
When I reached the head of Clark's trail, it was just daylight.
And there, under a pine, I found Jones rolled in his blankets with Sounder and mows asleep beside him.
I turned without disturbing him and went along the edge of the forest,
but back a little distance from the rim wall.
I saw deer off in the woods and tearing,
watched them throw up graceful heads and look and listen.
The soft pink glow through the pines deepened to rose,
and suddenly I caught a point of red fire.
Then I hurried to the place I had named singing cliffs, and keeping my eyes fast on the stone beneath me, crawled out on the very furthest point, drew a long deep breath, and looked eastward.
The awfulness of sudden death and the glory of heaven stunned me.
The thing that had been mystery at twilight lay clear, pure, open, in the rosy hue of dawn.
Out of the gates of the morning poured out light which glorified the palaces and pyramids.
purged and purified the afternoon's inscrutable cliffs, swept away the shadows of the
meshes, and bathed that broad, deep world of mighty mountains, stately spars of rock, sculptured cathedrals,
and alabaster terraces in an artist's dream of color. A pearl from heaven had burst,
flinging its heart of fire into this chasm. A stream of opal flowed out of the sun to touch
each peak, mesa, dome, parapet, temple, and tower, cliff and cleft into the new born life
of another day. I sat here for a long time and knew that every second the scene changed, yet I could
not tell how. I knew I sat high over a hole of broken, splintered, barren mountains. I knew I could
see a hundred miles of the length of it, and eighteen miles of the width of it, and a mile of the
depth of it, and the shafts and ray of rose light on a million glancing many-hued surfaces
at once. But that knowledge was no help to me. I repeated a lot of meaningless superlatives to myself,
and I found words inadequate and superfluous. The spectacle was too elusive and too great. It was life
and death, heaven and hell. I tried to call up former favorite views of mountain and sea,
so as to compare them with this,
but the memory pictures refused to come,
even with my eyes closed.
Then I returned to camp with unsettled, troubled mind,
and was silent, wondering at the strange feeling burning within me.
Jones talked about a visitor of the night before
and said the trail near where he had slept
showed only one cougar track,
and that led down to the canyon.
It had surely been made, he thought,
by the beast we had heard.
Joan signified his attention of chaining several of the hounds for the next few nights
at the head of this trail,
so if the cougar came up, they would send him and let us know,
from which it was evident that to chase a lion bound into the canyon
and one bound out were two different things.
The day passed lazily with all of us resting on the warm, fragrant pine-needled beds,
or mending a rent and a coat,
or working on some camp task,
impossible of commission,
on exciting days.
About four o'clock,
I took my little rifle
and walked off through the woods
in the direction of the carcass
where I had seen the gray wolf,
thinking it best to make a wide detour.
So it was to face the wind,
I circled till I felt the breeze
was favorable to my enterprise,
and then cautiously approached the hollow
where the dead horse lay.
Indian fashion I slipped from tree to tree,
a mode of forest travel not without its fascination and effectiveness,
till I reached the height of a knoll,
beyond which I made sure was my objective point.
On peeping out from behind the last pine,
I found I had calculated pretty well,
for there was the hollow,
the big windfall with its round starfish-shaped roots
exposed to the bright sun, and near that the carcass.
Sure enough, pulling hard at it was the gray white wolf.
I recognized as my loafer.
But he presented an exceedingly difficult shot.
Backing down the ridge, I found a little way to come up behind another tree,
from which I soon shifted to a fallen pine.
Over this I peeped, to get a splendid view of the wolf.
He had stopped tugging at the horse and stood with his nose in the air.
Surely he could not have sent me, for the wind was strong from him to me.
Neither could he have heard my soft footfalls,
on the pine needles. Nevertheless, he was suspicious. Loathed to spoil a picture he made,
I risk a chance and waited. Besides, though I prided myself on being able to take a fair
aim, I had no great hope that I could hit him at such a distance. Presently he returned to his
feeding, but not for long. He soon raised his fine, pointed head, and trotted away a few yards,
stopped to sniff again, then went back to his gruesome work. At the time, he soon. At the
At this juncture I noiselessly projected my rifle barrel over the log.
I had not, however, gotten the sights in line with him when he trotted away reluctantly
and ascended the knoll on his side of the hollow.
I lost him, and had just begun sourly to call myself a mollycoddle hunter.
When he reappeared, he halted in an open glade on the very crest of the knoll
and stood still as a statue wolf, a white, inspiring target against a dark green back.
I could not stifle a rush of feeling, for I was a lover of the beautiful first and a hunter
secondly.
But I steadied down as the front sight moved into the notch through which I saw the black and white
of his shoulder.
Spang!
How the little Remington sang.
I watched closely, ready to send five more missiles after the gray beast.
He jumped spasmodically in a half a half a half a half.
curve, high in the air, with a loosely hanging head, then dropped in a heap.
I yelled like a boy, ran down the hill up the other side of the hollow,
to find him stretched out dead, a small hole in his shoulder where the bullet had entered,
a great one, where it had come out.
The job I made of skinning him lacks some hundred degrees of perfection of my shot,
but I accomplished it and returned to camp and triumph.
"'Lar, I know you'd blunk him,' said Jim.
"'Very much pleased.
"'I shot one the other day same way,
"'when he was feeding off a dead horse.
"'Now that's a fine scan.
"'Sure you cut through once or twice,
"'but he's only half loafer.
"'The other half is plain coyote.
"'That accounts for his feeding on dead meat.
"'My naturalist host and my scientific friend
"'both remarked somewhat grumpily
"'that I seem to be able to be able.
"'That I seem to be able to be.
to get the best of all the good things.
I might have retaliated
that I certainly had gotten the worst of all the bad jokes,
but being generously happily over my prize,
merely remarked,
if you want fame or wealth or wolves,
go out and hunt for them.
Five o'clock supper left a good margin of day
in which my thoughts reverted to the canyon.
I watched the purple shadows stealing out of their caverns
and rolling up about the base of the maces.
Jones came over to where I stood,
and I persuaded him to walk with me along the rim wall.
Twilight had stealthily advanced when we reached the singing cliffs,
and we did not go out upon my promontory,
but chose a more comfortable one nearer the wall.
The night breeze had not sprung up yet,
so the music of the cliffs was hushed.
You cannot accept the theory of erosion to account for this chasm?
I asked my companion, referring to a former conversation,
A can for part of it.
But what stumps me is the mountain range
3,000 feet high,
crossing the desert in a canyon
just above where we crossed the river.
How did the river cut through that
with the help of a split or earthquake?
I'll admit that is a poser to me as well as to you,
but I suppose Wallace could explain it as erosion.
He claims his whole western country
was once underwater,
except the tips of the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
There came an uplift of the Earth's crust,
and the great inland sea began to run out,
presumably by way of the Colorado.
In so doing, it cut out the upper canyon,
this gorge, 18 miles wide.
Then came a second uplift,
giving the river a much greater impetus toward the sea,
which cut out the second or marble canyon.
Now as to the mountain range crossing the canyon at right angles,
It must have come with the second uplift.
If so, did it dam the river back into another inland sea,
and then wear down into that red perpendicular gorge we remember so well?
Or was there a great break in the fold of granite,
which let the river continue on its way?
Or was there at that particular point a softer stone like this limestone here,
which erodes easily?
You must ask, somebody wiser than I.
Well, let's not perplex our minds with its origin.
It is, and that's enough for my mind.
Ah, listen.
Now you will hear my singing cliffs.
From the darkening shadows, murmurs rose on the softly rising wind.
This strange music had a depressing influence,
but it did not fill the heart with sorrow, only touched it lightly.
And when, with the dying breeze the song died away,
it left the lonely crags lonelier, for its steadier.
death. The last rosy gleam faded from the tip of point sublime, and as if that were a signal.
All the clefts and canyes below, purple, shadowy clouds, marshaled their forces and began to sweep
upon the battlements to swing colossal wings into amphitheaters where gods might have warred,
slowly to enclose the magical sentinels. Night intervened, and a moving, changing silent chaos
pulsated under the bright stars.
How infinite all this is!
How impossible to understand, I exclaimed.
To me, it's very simple, replied my comrade.
The world is strange, but this canyon, why we can see it all.
I can't make out why people fuss over it.
I only feel peace.
It's only bold and beautiful, serene, and silent.
With the words of this quiet old plainsman, my sentimental passion shrank to the true appreciation of the scene.
Self passed out of the recurring soft strains of cliff song.
I had been reveling in a species of indulgence, imagining I was a great lover of nature,
building poetical illusions over storm-beaten peaks.
The truth told by one who had lived fifty years in the solitudes among the rugged mountains
under the dark trees, and by the signs of the lonely streams,
was a simple interpretation of a spirit in harmony with the bold,
the beautiful, the serene, the silent.
He meant the Grand Canyon was only a mood of nature,
a bold promise, a beautiful record.
He meant that mountains had sifted away in its dust,
yet the canyon was young.
Man was nothing, so let him be humble.
This cataclysm,
of the earth, this playground
of a river, was not
indestructible. It was only
inevitable, as
inevitable as nature itself.
Millions of years in the
bygone ages, it had lain
serene under a live moon.
It would bask silent under a
rayless sun, in the outward
edge of time.
It taught simplicity, serenity,
peace. The eye that saw
only the strife, the war, the decay,
the ruin, or
only the glory and the tragedy, saw not all the truth. It spoke simply, though its words were grand.
My spirit is the spirit of time, of eternity of God. Man is little, vain, fawning, listen.
Tomorrow he shall be gone. Peace, peace.
End of chapter 13. Chapter 14 of the last of the plainsman by Zane Gray. This Libre Vox recording
is in the public domain, recording by Mike Vendetti,
Mike Vendetti.com
The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray, Chapter 14.
All heroes but one.
As we wrote up the slope of buckskin,
the sunrise glinted red gold
through the aisles of frosted pines,
giving us a hunter's glad greeting.
With all due respect to and appreciation of,
the brakes of the sea-wash,
we unanimously decided
that if cougars inhabited any other section of canyon country,
we preferred it, and we're going to find it.
We had often speculated on the appearance of the rim wall
directly across the neck of the canyon upon which we were located.
It showed a long stretch of breaks, fissures, caves, yellow crags,
crumbled ruins and clefts green with pinion pine.
As a crow flies, it was only a mile or two straight across from camp.
But to reach it, we had to ascend the mountain,
and head the canyon, which indented the slope.
A thousand feet or more above the level bench.
The character of the forest changed.
The pines grew thicker and interspersed among them
were silver spruces and balsams.
Here in the clumps of small trees and underbrush.
We began to jump deer, and in a few moments a greater number
than I had ever seen in all my hunting experiences loped within range of my eye.
i could not look out into the forest where an aisle or lane or glade stretched to any distance without seeing a big great deer cross it jones said the herds had recently come up from the brakes where they had wintered
these deer were twice the size of the eastern species and as fat as well-fed cattle they were almost as tame too big herd ran over one glade leaving behind several
curious doves, which watched us intently for a moment, then bound off with a stiff, springy bounce
that so amused me.
Sounder crossed fresh trails one after another. Jude, Tig, and Ranger followed him, but hesitated
off and barked and whined. Don started off once to come sneaking back at Jones's stern call.
But surly old Moes either would not or could not obey, and away he dashed. Bang!
Jones sent a charge of fine shot after him.
He helped double-uped as if stung
and returned as quickly as he had gone.
"'Hare, you white and black coon dog,'
said Jones, get him behind to stay there.'
We turned to the right after a while
and got among shallow ravines.
Gigantic pines grew on the ridges and the hollows,
and everywhere bluebells shone blue from the white frost.
Why the frost did not kill these beautiful flowers
was a mystery to me.
The horses could not step without crushing them.
Before long, the ravines became so deep
that we had to zigzag up and down their sides
and to force our horses through the aspen thickets in the hollows.
Once from a ridge I saw a troop of deer and stopped to watch them.
27, I counted outright,
but there must have been three times that number.
I saw the herd break across the glade
and watched them until they were lost in the forest.
My companions, having disappeared, I pushed on,
and while working out of a wide, deep hollow,
I noticed the sunny patches fade from the bright slopes
and the golden streaks vanish among the pines.
The sky had become overcast in a forest of darkening.
The Wahoo, I cried out, returned in echo only.
The wind blew hard in the face, and the pines began to bend and roar.
An immense black cloud enveloped the buckskin.
Satan had carried me no further than the next ridge
when the forest frowned dark as twilight
and on the wind whirled flakes of snow.
Over the next hollow a white pall roared through the trees toward me.
Hardly had I time to get the direction of the trail
and its relation to the trees nearby
when the storm unfolded me.
Of his own accord, Satan stopped in the lee of a bushy spruce.
The roar in the pines equaled that of the king,
cave under Niagara, and a bewildering whirling mass of snow was as difficult to see through
as the tumbling, seething waterfall. I was confronted by the possibility of passing the night there,
calming my fears as best I could, hastily felt for my matches and knife. The prospect of being
lost the next day in a white forest was also appalling, but I soon reassured myself that the
Storm was only a snow-squall, and would not last long.
Then I gave myself up to the pleasure and beauty of it.
I could only faintly discern the dim trees, the limbs of the spruce,
which partially preceded me, sagged down to my head with their burden,
I had but to reach out my hand for a snowball.
Both the wind and snow seemed warm.
The great flakes were like swan feathers on a summer breeze.
There was something joyous in the quarrel and the whirl and the snow.
snow and roar of wind.
While I bent over to shake my holster,
the storm passed as suddenly as it had come.
When I looked up,
there were the pines,
like pillars of parian marble,
and a white shadow,
a vanishing cloud fled.
With receding roar on the wings of the wind,
fast on this retreat burst the warm, bright sun.
A faced my course and was delighted to see
through an opening where the ravine cut out of the forest,
the red-tipped peaks of the canyon,
and the vaulted dome I had named St. Marks.
As I started, a new and unexpected
after feature of the storm began to manifest itself.
The sun being warm, even hot,
began to melt the snow,
and under the trees a heavy rain fell,
and in the glades and hollows fine mist blew.
Exquisite rainbows hung from white-tipped branches
and curved over the hollows.
Glistening patches of snow fell from the pines
and broke the showers.
In a quarter of an hour, I rode out of the forest to the rim wall on dry ground.
Against the green pinions, Frank's white horse stood out conspicuously,
and near him browsed the mouths of Jim and Wallace.
The boys were not in evidence.
Concluding they had gone down over the rim, I dismounted and kicked off my shaps,
and taking my rifle and camera, hurried to look the place over.
To my surprise and interest, I found a long succession of rim wall in ruins.
It lay in a great curve between the two giant capes
and many short sharp projecting promontories
like the teeth of a saw overhung the canyon.
The slopes between these points of cliff
were covered with a deep growth of pinion
and in these places descent would be easy.
Everywhere in the corrugated wall were rents and rifts.
Cliffs stood detached like islands near ashore.
Yellow crags rose out of green cliffs,
jumble of rocks and slides of
rim wall, broken into blocks, masked under their promontories.
The singular raggedness and wildness of the scene took hold of me, and was not dispelled
until the baying of Sounder and dawn roused action in me.
Apparently the hounds were widely separated.
Then I heard Jim's yell, but it ceased when the wind lulled and I heard it no more.
Running back from the point I began to go down.
The way was steep, almost perpendicular, but because of the great stones and
the absence of slides was easy. I took long strides and jumps and slid over rocks and swung on
pinion branches and covered distance like a rolling stone. At the foot of the rim wall, or at a line
where it would have reached had it extended regularly, the slope became less pronounced. I could
stand up without holding onto a support. The largest pinions I had seen made the forest that
almost stood on end. These trees grew up, down and out and twisted.
in curves and many were two feet in thickness.
During my descent, I halted at intervals to listen
and always heard one of the hounds sometimes several.
But as I descended for a long time
and did not get anywhere or approach the dogs,
I began to grow impatient.
A large pinion with a dead top suggested a good outlook,
so I climbed it and saw I could sweep a large section of the slope.
It was a strange thing to look downhill
over the tips of green trees.
Below perhaps 400 yards was a slide open for a long way.
All the rest was green incline
and with many dead branches sticking up like spears
and an occasional craig.
From this perch I heard the hounds,
then followed a yell a thought was Jim's,
and after it up the bellowing of Wallace's rifle.
Then all was silent.
The shots had effectively checked the yelping of the hounds.
I let out a yell,
another cougar that Jones would not lasso.
All at once I heard a familiar sliding of small rocks below me,
and I watched the open slope with greedy eyes.
Not a bit surprised was I to see a cougar break out of the green
and go tearing down the slide.
In less than six seconds,
I had sent six steel-jacket bullets after him.
Puffs of dust rose closer and closer to him,
each bullet went near the mark,
and the last showered him with gravel
and turned him straight down the canyon slope.
I slid down the dead pinion
and jumped nearly 20 feet to the soft sand below.
And after putting a loaded clip in my rifle,
began kangaroo leaps down the slope.
When I reached the point where the cougar had entered the slide,
I called the hounds, but they did not come nor answer me.
Notwithstanding my excitement,
I appreciated the distance to the bottom of the slope
before I reached it.
In my haste, I ran upon the verge of a press-up,
twice as deep as the first rim wall,
but one glanced down sent me shudderling backward.
With all the breath I had left, I yelled,
Wahoo! Wahoo!
From the echoes flung at me,
I imagined at first that my friends were right on my ears.
But no real answer came.
The cougar had probably passed along this second rim wall to a break
and had gone down.
His trail could easily be taken by any of the hounds.
Vexed and anxious, I signaled again and again.
Once, long after the echo had gone to sleep in some hollow canyon, I caught a faint,
Wah-hoo.
But it might have come from the clouds.
I did not hear a hound barking above me on the slope, but suddenly, to my amazement.
Sounders' deep bay rose from the abyss below.
I ran along the rim, called till I was hoarse, leaned over so far that the blood rushed to my head,
and then sat down.
I concluded this canyon hunting could bear some success.
sustained attention and thought, as well as frenzied action.
Examination of my position showed how impossible it was to arrive at any clear idea of the depth or size
or condition of the canyon slopes from the main rim of wall above.
The second wall, a stupendous yellow face cliff, 2,000 feet high, curved to my left round
to a point in front of me.
The intervening canyon might have been half a mile wide and it might have been 10 miles,
I became disgusted with judging distance.
The slope above this second wall facing me ran up far above my head.
It fairly towered, and this routed all my former judgments
because I remembered distinctly that from the rim this yellow and green mountain
had appeared an insignificant little ridge,
but it was when I turned my gaze up behind me that I fully grasped the immensity of the place.
This wall and slope were the first two steps down the long stairway of the Grand Canyon,
and they towered over me, straight up a half-mile in dizzying height.
To think of climbing it took my breath away.
Then again, Sounders Bay floated distinctly to me,
but it seemed to come from a different point.
I turned my ear to the wind, and in the succeeding moments I was more and more baffled.
One bay sounded from below, and next from far to the right,
another from the left.
I could not distinguish voice from echo.
The acoustic properties of the amphitheater beneath me
were too powerful for my comprehension.
As the bay grew sharper
and correspondingly more significant,
I became distracted and focused a strained vision
on the canyon deeps.
I looked along the slope to the notch
where the wall curved and followed the baseline of the yellow cliff.
Quite suddenly I saw a very small,
black object moving with snail-like slowness.
Although it seemed impossible for Sounder to be so small, I knew it was he.
Having something now to judge distance from, I conceived it to be a mile, without the drop.
If I could hear Sounder, he could hear me.
So I yelled encouragement.
The echoes clapped back at me like so many slaps in the face.
I watched the hound until he disappeared among the broken heaps of stone,
and long after that his bay flowed.
to me. Having rested, I essayed the discovery of some of my lost companions or the hounds
and began to climb. Before I started, however, I was wise enough to study the rim wall above,
to familiarize myself with the brakes so I would have a landmark. Like horns and spurs of gold,
the pinnacles loomed up, massed closely together. They were not unlike an astounding pipe organ.
I had a feeling of my littleness that I was lost
and should devote every moment and effort to the saving of my life.
It did not seem possible I could be hunting.
Though I climbed to agnally and rested often,
my heart pumped so hard I could hear it.
A yellow crag with a round head like an old man's cane
appeared to me as near the place where I had last heard from Jim.
And toward it I labored.
Every time I glanced up the distance seemed to see.
same, a climb which I decided would not take more than 15 minutes required an hour.
While resting at the foot of the crag, I heard more bang of hounds, but for my life I could
not tell whether the sound came from up or down, and I commenced to feel that I did not much
care. Having signaled till I was hoarse and receiving none but mock answers, I decided that
if my companions had not toppled over a cliff, they were wisely withholding their breath.
Another stiff pull-up the slope brought me under the rim wall,
and there I groaned because the wall was smooth and shiny without a break.
I plotted slowly along the base with my rifle ready.
Cougar tracks were so numerous I got tired of looking at them,
but I did not forget that I might meet a tawny fellow or two
along those narrow passages of shattered rock,
and under the thick, dark pinions.
Going on in this way, I ran point-blank into a pile of bleached bones,
before a cave. I had stumbled on the lair of a lion, and from the looks of it, one like that of
old Tom. I flinched twice before I threw a stone into the dark-mouth cave. What impressed me
as soon as I found I was in no danger of being pawed and clawed around the gloomy spot, was from
the fact of the bones being there. How did they come on a slope where a man could hardly walk?
Only one answer seemed feasible. The lion had made his kill one.
thousand feet above and pulled the quarry to the rim and pushed it over.
In view of the theory that he might have had to drag his victim from the forest
and that very seldom two lions worked together,
the fact of the location of the bones was startling.
Skulls of wild horses and deer antlers and countless bones
all crushed into shapelessness, furnished the inaudible proof
that the carcasses had fallen from a great height.
Most remarkable wall was the skeleton of a cougar lying across that of a horse.
I believed, I could not help but believe, that the cougar had fallen with his last victim.
Not running rods beyond the lion den, the rim wall split into towers, crags and pinnacles.
I thought I had found my pipe organ and began to climb toward a narrow opening in the rim, but I lost it.
The extraordinary cut-up condition of the wall made holding to one direction,
impossible. Soon I realized I was lost in a labyrinth. I tried to find my way down again, but the best
I could do was to reach the verge of a cliff from which I could see the canyon. Then I knew
where I was, yet I did not know, so I plodded wearily back. Many a blind cliff did I ascend
in the maze of crags. I could hardly crawl along, still I kept at it, for the place was conducive
to dire thoughts.
A tower of Babel menaced me with tons of loose shale,
a tower that leaned more frightfully than the tower of pizza,
threatened to build my tomb.
Many a lighthouse-shaped crag sent down little scattering rocks in ominous notice.
After tolling in and out passageways under the shadows of these strangely formed crypt,
and coming again and again to the same point, a blind pocket, I grew it desperate.
I named the baffling place Deception Parenthood.
and then ran down a slide.
I knew if I could keep my feet I could beat the avalanche.
More by good luck than management,
I outran the roaring stones and landed safely.
Then rounding the cliff below I found myself on a narrow ledge
with the wall to my left and to the right
the tips of pinion trees level with my feet.
Innocently and wearily I passed around a pillar-like corner of wall
to come face to face with an old lioness and cubs.
I heard the mother snarl, and at the same time her ears went back flat, and she crouched.
The same fire of yellow eyes, the same grim snarling expression so familiar in my mind since old Tom had leaped at me, faced me here.
My rancent vow of extermination was entirely forgotten, and one frantic spring carried me over the ledge.
Crush!
I felt the brushing and scratching of branches,
and saw a green blurr.
I went down straddling limbs
and hit the ground with a thump.
Fortunately, I landed mostly on my feet,
in sand, and suffered no serious bruise.
But I was stunned and my right arm was numb for a moment.
Then I gathered myself together.
Instead of being grateful,
the ledge had not been on the face of the point sublime,
from which I would most assuredly have leaped.
I was the angriest man ever let loose in the grand king.
canyon. Of course, the cougars were far on their way by that time, and were telling their
neighbors about to brave hunters leap for life, so I devoted myself to further efforts to find an
outlet. The niche I had jumped into opened below, as did most of the brakes, and I worked out
of it to the base of the rim wall, and tramped a long, long mile before I reached my own trail leading
down. Resting every five steps, I climbed and climbed. My rifle drew to way a turn.
ton, my feet were lead, the camera stacked my shoulder, was the world.
Soon, climbing meant trapeze work, long reach of arm, and pull of weight, high step of foot,
and spring of body.
Where I had slid down with ease, I had to strain and raise myself by sheer muscle.
I wore my left glove to tatters and threw it away to put the right one on my left hand.
I thought many times I could not make another move.
I thought my lungs would burst, but I kept on.
When at last I surmounted the rim, I saw Jones and flopped down beside him,
and lay panting, dripping, boiling, with scorched feet, aching limbs, and numb chest.
I've been here for two hours, he said, and I knew things were happening below,
but to climb up that slide would kill me.
I'm not young anymore, and a steep climb like this takes a young heart.
As it was, I had enough.
stuff work. Look. He called my attention to his trousers. They had been cut to shreds and his
bright trouser leg was missing from the knee down. His shin was bloody. Moes took a lion along
the rim and I went after him with all my horse could do. I yelled for boys but they didn't come.
Right here it is easy to go down, but below where Moes started this lion, it was impossible to
get over the rim. The lion lit straight out of the pinions. I lost ground.
because of the thick brush and numerous trees,
then mose didn't bark often enough.
He treated the lion twice,
I could tell by the way he opened up and bade.
The rascal coon dog climbed the trees and chased the lion out.
That's what Mose did.
I got to an open space and saw him,
and was coming up fine when he went down over a hollow
which ran into the canyon.
My horse dripped and fell,
turning clear over with me before he threw me into the brush.
tore my clothes and got there's bruise.
But it wasn't much hurt.
The horse was pretty lame.
I began a recital of my experience,
modestly admitting the incident
where I bravely faced an old lioness.
Upon consulting my watch,
I found I had been almost four hours climbing out.
At that moment, Frank poked a red face over the rim.
He was in his shirt-sleeves sweating freely,
and wore a frown.
I had never seen before.
He puffed like a porpoise.
and at first could hardly speak.
"'Where you all?' he panted.
"'Say, but maybe this hasn't been a chase.
Jim and Wallace and me went tumbling down after the dogs,
each one looking out for this particular dog,
and darn me if I didn't believe his lion, too.
Don took one oozing down the canyon,
with me hot footing after him,
and somewhere he'd treat that lion right below me,
in a box canyon, sort of an offshoot of the second rim,
and I couldn't locate him.
I blamed near, kill myself more than once.
Look at my knuckles, barked him sliding down a mile down a smooth wall.
I thought once the line had jumped on, but soon I heard him barking again.
All that time I heard sounder, and once I heard the pup.
Jim yelled and somebody was shooting, but I couldn't find nobody or make nobody hear me.
That canyon, it is a mighty deceiving place.
You'd never think so till you go down.
I wouldn't climb up it again for all the lions and buckskin.
Hello, here comes Jim oozing up.
Jim appeared just over the rim,
and when he got up to us, dusty torn and fagged out with Don, Tieg,
and ranger showing signs of collapse,
we all blurted out questions, but Jim took his time.
Sure, that canyon is one hellful place he began finally.
Where was everybody?
Tigg and the pup went down with me and treat a cooom,
Yes, they did, and I sat under opinion holding the pup while TIG kept the cougar treed.
I yelled and yelled after about an hour or two, Wallace came pounding down like a giant.
It was a sure thing we'd get the cougar, and Wallace was taking his picture when the blame
cat jumped. It was embarrassing because he wasn't polite about how he jumped.
We scattered some, and when Wallace got his gun, the cougar was humping down the slope,
and he was going so fast and the pinions was so thick
that Wallace couldn't get a fair shot and missed.
Teague and the pup was so scared by the shots
they wouldn't take the trail again.
I heard someone shoot about a million times
and sure thought the cougar would done for.
Wallace went plunging down the slope and I followed.
I couldn't keep up with him.
He sure takes long steps and I lost him.
I'm reckoning he went over the second wall.
Then I made tracks for the top.
"'Boys, the way you can see and hear things down in that canyon,
"'the way you can't hear and see things is pretty funny.
"'If Wallace went over the second rim wall,
"'will he get back to-day, we all ask.
"'There are no telling.'
"'We waited, lounged and slept for three hours,
"'and we're beginning to worry about a comrade
"'when he hove inside eastward along the rim.
"'He walked like a man whose next step would be his last.
"'When he reached us, he fell flat.
and lay breathing heavily for a while.
Someone once mentioned Israel Putnam's ascent of a hill, he said slowly.
With all respect to history and a patriot,
I wish to say Putnam never saw a hill.
Ouse for camp, called out, Frank.
Five o'clock found us round a bright fire,
all casting ravenous eyes at a smoking supper.
The smell of the Persian meat would have made a wolf of a vegetarian.
I devoured four chops and could not have been counted in the running.
Jim opened a can of maple syrup which he had been saving for a grand occasion
and Frank winning one better with two cans of peaches.
How glorious to be hungry to feel the craving for food
and to be grateful for it to realize that the best of life lies
in the daily needs of existence and to battle for them.
Nothing could be stronger than a simple enumeration and statement of the
facts of Wallace's experience after he left Jim. He chased the cougar and kept it in sight
until it went over the second rim wall. Here he dropped over a precipice, 20 feet high, to a light
on a fan-shaped slide which spread toward the bottom. It began to slip and move by jerks and then
started off steadily, with an increasing roar. He rode an avalanche for 1,000 feet. The jar loosened
boulders from the walls. When the slide stopped, Wallace extricated his feet and began to
to dodge the boulders.
He had only time to jump over the large ones
or dart to one side out of their way.
He dared not run.
He had to watch them coming.
One huge stone hurled over his head
and smashed a pinion tree below.
When these had ceased rolling
and he had passed down to the red shale,
he heard sounder baying near
and knew a cougar had been treeed or cornered.
Hurdling the stones and dead pinions,
Wallace ran a mile down the slope,
only to find he had been deceased,
perceived in the direction.
He shered off to the left.
Sounder's elusive bay came up from a deep cleft.
Wallace plunged into a pinion, climbed to the ground,
skidded down a solid slide to come upon an impassable obstacle
in the form of a solid wall of red granite.
Sounder appeared and came to him, evidently having given him up to chase.
Wallace consumed four hours in making the ascent.
In the notch of the curve of the second rim wall,
he climbed the slippery steps of a waterfall,
At one point, if he had not been six feet five inches tall,
he would have been compelled to attempt retracing his trail,
an impossible task.
But his height enabled him to reach a route,
by which he pulled himself up.
Sounder he lassued, allah Jones, and hauled up.
At another spot which Sounder climbed, he lasued a pinion above.
Anne walked up with his feet slipping from under him at every step.
The knees of his corduroyed trousers were holes,
as were the elbows of his coat.
The sole of his left boot, which he used most in climbing, was gone.
And so was his hat.
End of Chapter 14.
Chapter 15 of The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
recording by Mike Vendetti, Mike Vendetti.com.
The Last Little Plainsman by Zane Gray.
Chapter 15.
Jones on Cougars
Mountain Lion or Cougar of our Rocky Mountain region
is nothing more nor less than the panther.
He is a little different in shape,
color, and size,
which vary according to his environment.
The panther of the rockies is usually light,
taking the gray hue of the rocks.
He is stockier and heavier of build
and stronger of limb than the eastern species,
which differences come from climbing mountains
and springing down the cliffs after his prey.
In regions accessible to man
or when where man is encountered even rarely,
The Cougar is exceedingly shy, seldom or never venturing from the cover.
During the day, he spends the hours of daylight high on the most rugged cliffs,
sleeping and basking in the sunshine and watching with wonderfully keen sight the valleys below.
His hearing equals his sight, and if danger threatens, he always hears it in time to sulk away unseen.
At night he steals down the mountainside, toward deer or elk, he is located during the day.
Keeping to the lowest ravines and thickets, he creeps upon his prey.
His cunning and ferocity are keener and more savage in proportion
to the length of time he has been without food.
As he grows hungrier and thinner, his skill and fierce strategy correspondingly increase.
A well-fed cougar will creep upon and secure only about one in seven of the deer elk,
antelope, mountain sheep that he stalks.
But a starving cougar is another animal.
He creeps like a snake,
is as sure on the scent as a vulture,
makes no more noise than a shadow,
and he hides behind a stone or bush
that would scarcely conceal a rabbit.
Then he springs with terrific force
and intensity of purpose
and seldom fails to reach his victim,
and once the claws of a starved lion touch flesh,
they never let go.
A cougar seldom pursues his quarry
after he is leaped and missed,
either from disgust or failure or knowledge
that a second attempt would be futile.
The animal making the easiest prey for the cougar is the elk.
About every other elk attack falls on victim.
Deer are more fortunate,
the ratio being one dead to five leaped at.
The antelope, living on the lowlands or upland meadows,
escapes nine times out of ten,
and the mountain sheep or big horn seldom falls to the onslaught of his enemy.
Once the lion gets a hold with the great forepaw,
every movement of the struggling prey sinks the sharp, hooked claws deeper.
Then as quickly as possible, the lion fastens his teeth in the throat of his prey
and grips till it is dead.
In this way, elk have carried lions for many rods.
The lion seldom tears the skin of the neck and never, as is generally supposed,
sucks the blood of its victim.
But he cuts into the side just behind the foreshoulder.
and eats the liver first.
He rolls the skin back as neatly and tightly as a person could do it.
When he has gorged himself, he drags the carcass into a ravine or a dense thicket,
and rakes leave, sticks, or dirt over it to hide it from other animals.
Usually he returns to his cage on the second night,
and after that the frequency of his visits depend on the supply of fresh prey.
In remote regions, unfrequented by man,
the lion will guard his cake from cliots and,
and buzzards.
In sex, there are about five female lions to one male.
This is caused by the jealous and vicious disposition of the male.
It is a fact that the old tombs kill every young lion they can catch.
Both male and female of the litter suffer alike until after weaning time, and then only the males.
In this matter, wise animal logic is displayed by the tombs.
The domestic cat, to some extent, possesses the same trait.
If the litter is destroyed, the mating time is sure to come about regardless of the season.
Thus, this savage trait of the lions prevents overproduction and breeds a hearty and intrepid race.
If by chance or that cardinal feature of animal life, the survival of the fittest, a young male lion escapes to the weaning time,
even after that he is persecuted.
Young male lions have been killed and found to have had their flesh beaten until it was a mass of bruises and undoubtedly
it had been the work of an old Tom.
Moreover, old males and females have been killed and found
to be in the same bruised condition.
A feature and a conclusive one is the fact
that invariably the female is suckling her young at that's period
and sustains the bruises in desperately defending her litter.
It is astonishing how cunning, wise, and faithful an old lioness is.
She seldom leaves her care.
From the time they are six weeks old, she takes them out to train them for the battles of life,
and the struggle continues from birth to death.
A lion hardly ever dies naturally.
As soon as night descends, the lioness dothily stalks forth, and because of her little
ones takes very short steps, the cubs follow stepping in their mother's tracks.
When she crouches for game, each little lion crouches also, and each one remains perfectly
still until she springs or signals them to come.
If she secures the prey, they all gorge themselves.
After the feast, the mother takes her back trail,
stepping in the tracks she made coming down the mountain,
and the cubs are very careful to follow suit
and not to leave marks of their trail in the soft snow.
No doubt this habit is practiced to keep their deadly enemies
in ignorance of their existence.
The old tombs and white hunters are their only foes,
Indians never kill a lion.
This trick of the lions has fooled many hunter,
concerning not only the direction,
but particularly the number.
The only successful way to hunt lions is with trained dogs.
A good hound can trail him for several hours
after the tracks have been made,
and on a cloudy or wet day can hold the scent much longer.
In snow, the hound can trail for three or four days
after the track has been made.
When Jones was Game Warden of Yellowstone National Park,
he had unexampled opportunities to hunt cougars and learn their habits.
All the cougars in that region of the Rockies made a rendezvous of the game preserve.
Jones soon procured a pack of hounds,
but as they had been trained to run deer, foxes, and coyotes,
he had great trouble.
They would break on the trail of these animals
and also on elk and antelope,
just when this was furthest from his wish.
He soon realized that to train the hounds was a sore task.
When they refused to come back at his call,
he stung them with fine shot.
And in this manner taught obedience.
But obedience was not enough.
The hounds must know how to follow and tree a lion.
With this in mind, Jones decided to catch a lion alive
and give his dog practical lessons.
A few days after reaching this decision,
he discovered the tracks of two lions
in the neighborhood of Mount Everett.
The hounds were put on a trail and followed it into an abandoned coal shaft.
Jones recognized this is his opportunity.
In taking his lasso and an extra rope, he crawled into the hole.
Not fifteen feet from the opening sat one of the cougars, snarling and spitting.
Jones promptly lassoed it, passed his end of the lasso, round a slide prop on the shaft,
and out to the soldiers who had followed him, instructing them not to pull till they called,
cautiously began to crawl by the cougar, with the intention of getting further back and roping
its hind leg, so as to prevent disaster when the soldiers pulled it out. He accomplished this.
Not without some uneasiness in regard to the second lion and giving the word to his companions,
soon had his captive hauled from the shaft and tied so tightly it could not move.
Jones took the cougar and his hounds to an open place in the park, where there were trees
and prepared for a chase.
Losing the lion, he held his hounds back a moment,
then let them go.
Within 100 yards, the cougar climbed a tree,
and the dogs saw the performance.
Taking a forked stick,
Jones mounted up to the cougar,
caught it under the jaw with a stick,
and pushed it out.
There was a fight, a scramble,
and the cougar dashed off
to run up another tree.
In this manner, he soon trained his hounds
to the pink of perfection.
Jones discovered while in the park
that the cougar is king of all beasts of North America.
Even a grizzly dashed away in great haste when a cougar made his appearance.
At the road camp near Mount Washburn,
during the fall of 1904, the bears, grizzlies, and others
were always hanging around the cook tent.
There were cougars also in almost every evening about dusk.
A big fellow would come parading past the tent.
The bears would grunt furiously and scamper in every direction.
It was easy to tell when a cougar was in a neighborhood
by the peculiar grunts and snorts of the bears
and the sharp, distinct, alarmed yelps of coyotes.
A lion would just as leaf kill a coyote as any other animal,
and he would devour it too.
As to the fighting of cougars and grizzlies,
that was a mooted question,
with the credit on the side of the former.
The story of the doings of cougars, as told in the snow, was intensely fascinating and
tragical.
How they stalked deer and elk, crept to within springing distance, then crawled flat to leap,
was as easy to read as if it had been told in print.
The leaps and bounds were beyond the leaf.
The longest leap on a level measured 18 and one-half feet.
Jones trailed a half-grown cougar, which in turn was trailing a big,
elk. He found where the cougar had struck his game, had clung for many rods to be dashed off
by the low limb of a spruce tree. The imprint of the body of the cougar was a foot deep in the
snow. Blood and tufts of hair covered the place, but there was no sign of the cougar, renewing
the chase. In rare cases, cougars would refuse to run or take to trees. One day Jones followed
the hounds eight in number to come on a huge tom holding the whole packet bay.
He walked to and fro, lashing his tail from side to side,
and when Jones dashed up, he coolly climbed a tree.
Jones shot the cougar which, in falling, struck one of the hounds crippling him.
The hound would never approach a tree after this incident,
believing probably that the cougar had sprung upon him.
Usually the hounds chased their quarry into a tree long before Jones rode up.
It was always desirable to kill the animal with the first shot.
If the cougar was wounded and fell or jumped among the tree,
dogs, there was sure to be a terrible fight, and the best dogs always received serious injuries,
if they were not killed outright.
The lion would seize a hound, pull him close, and bite him in the brain.
Jones asserted that a cougar would usually run from a hunter, but that this feature was not
to be relied upon.
And a wounded cougar was as dangerous as a tiger.
In his hunts, Jones carried a shotgun and shells loaded with ball for the
cougar, and others loaded with fine shot for the hounds. One day about ten miles from the camp,
the hounds took a trail and ran rapidly, as there were only a few inches of snow. Jones found a large
lion had taken refuge in a tree that had fallen against another, and aiming at the shoulder
of the beast he fired both barrels. The cougar made no signs he had been hit. Jones reloaded
and fired at the head. The old fellow growled fiercely, turned in the tree and walked down head first,
something he would not have been able to do had the tree been upright.
The hounds were ready for him, but wisely attacked in the rear.
Realizing he had been shooting fine shot at the animal,
Jones began a hurried search for a shell loaded with ball.
The lion made for him, compelling him to dodge behind trees.
Even though the hounds kept nipping the cougar,
the persistent fellows still pursued the hunter.
At last, Jones found the right shell just as the cougar reached for him.
Major, the leader of the hounds, darted bravely in and grasped the leg of the beast just in a nick of time.
This enabled Jones to take aim and fire at close range, which ended the fight.
Upon examination, it was discovered the cougar had been half-blinded by the fine shot,
which accounted for the ineffectual attempts he had made to catch Jones.
The mountain lion rarely attacks a human being for the purpose of eating.
When hungry, he will often follow their tracks of people,
and under favorable circumstances may ambush them.
In the park where game is plentiful,
no one has ever known a cougar to follow the trail of a person,
but outside the park, lions have been known to follow hunters
and practically stalk little children.
The Davis family, living a few miles north of the park,
have had children pursued to the very doors of their cabin,
and other families relate similar experiences.
Jones heard of only one fatality,
but he believes that if it is,
the children were left alone in the woods,
the cougars would creep closer and closer,
and when assured there was no danger with spring and kill.
Jones never heard the cry of a cougar in the national park,
which strange circumstance,
considering the great number of the animals there.
He believed to be on account of the abundance of game,
but he had heard it when a boy in Illinois,
and when a man all over the west,
and the cry was always the same,
weird and wild like the scream of a terrified woman.
He did not understand the significance of the cry
unless it meant hunger
or the wailing mourn of a lioness for her murdered cubs.
The destructiveness of this savage species was murderous.
Jones came upon one old Tom's den
where there was a pile of 19 elk,
mostly yearlings.
Only five or six had been eaten.
Jones hunted this old fellow for months
and found that the lion killed on the average three animals a week.
The hounds got him up at length and chased him to the Yellowstone River,
which he swam at a point impassable for man or horse.
One of the dogs at Giant Blood Owl named Jack,
swam the swift channel, kept on after the lion but never returned.
All cougars have their peculiar traits and habits.
The same as other creatures and all old tombs have strongly marked characteristics.
But this one was the most,
destructive cougar Jones ever knew. During Jones's short sojourn as warden in the park,
he captured numerous cougars live and killed 72. End of chapter 15. Chapter 16 of the last of
the plainsman by Zane Gray. This Lieber Vox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Mike Vendetti.
Mike Vendetti.com. The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray. Chapter 16. Kitty.
It seemed my eyelids had scarcely touched, when Jones, exasperating yet stimulating yell, aroused me.
Day was breaking.
The moon and stars shone with wan luster, a white snowy frost, silvered the forest.
Old Moes had curled clothes beside me, and now he gazed at me reproachfully and shivered.
Lawson came hustling in with the horses.
Jim busied himself around the campfire.
My fingers nearly froze while I saddled my horse.
At five o'clock we were trotting up the slope of buckskin
bound for this section of ruined rim wall
where we had encountered the convention of cougars,
hoping to save time, we took a shortcut,
and were soon crossing deep ravines.
The sunrise coloring the purple curtain of cloud over the canyon
was too much for me,
and I lagged on a high ridge to watch it,
thus falling behind my more practical companions.
A far-off wahoo,
brought me to a realization of the day's turn duty,
and I hurried Satan forward on the trail.
Came suddenly upon our leader,
leading his horse through the scrub pinion on the edge of the canyon,
and I knew at once something had happened,
for he was closely scrutinizing the ground.
I declare this beats me all hollow, began Jones.
We might be hunting rabbits instead of the wildest animals on the continent.
We jumped a bunch of lions in this clump of pinion,
There must have been at least four.
I thought we'd run upon an old lioness with cubs,
but all the trails were made by full-grown lions.
Moes took one north along the rim,
same as the other day, but the lion got away quick.
Frank saw one lion,
Wallace's following sounder down into the first hollow.
Jim has gone over the rim wall after dawn.
There you are.
Four lions playing tag in broad daylight on top of this wall.
I'm inclined to believe Clark didn't exaggerate.
but confound the luck the hounds have split again they're doing the best of course and it's up to us to stay up with them i'm afraid we'll lose some of them hello i hear a signal that's from wallace wahoo wahoo
there he is coming out of the hollow the tall californian reached us presently with sounder beside him he reported that the hound had chased a lion into an impassable break and then joined frank on a jutting crag of the canyon wall wahoo yelled jones
There was no answer except the echo, and it rolled up out of the chasm with strange, hollow mockery.
Don took a cougar down this slide, said Frank.
I saw the brute, and Don was making him hump.
Ah, there, listen to that.
When the green and yellow depth came the faint yelp of a hound.
That's Don, that's Don, cried Jones.
He's hot on something.
We're a sounder.
Here, a sounder.
By George, there he goes down the side.
Hear him?
He's opened up.
High, hi, hi, hi.
The deep, full bay of the hound came ringing on the clear air.
Wallace, you go down.
Frank and I will climb out on that pointed crag.
Great, you stay here.
Then we'll have the slide between us.
Listen and watch.
From my promontory, I watched Wallace go down with his gigantic strides,
sending the rocks rolling and cracking.
And then I saw Jones and Frank crawl out to the end of a crumbling ruin
of yellow wall, which threatened to go spluttering and thundering.
down into the abyss.
I thought as I listened to the penetrating voice of the hound
that nowhere on earth could there be a grander scene
of for wild action, wild life.
My position afforded a commanding view
over a hundred miles of the noblest and most sublime work of nature.
The rim wall where I stood sheared down a thousand feet
to meet a long wood slope which cut abruptly off
into another giant precipice.
A second long slope descended and jumped off into what seemed the grave of the world.
Most striking in that vast void were the long, irregular points of rimwall,
protruding into the Grand Canyon.
From points sublime to pink cliffs of Utah,
there were twelve of these colossal capes miles apart,
some sharp, some round, some blunt, all ragged and bold.
The great chasm in the middle was full of purple smoke.
It seemed a mighty sepulchre, from which misty fumes rolled upward.
The turrets, maces, domes, peripets, escarpments of yellow and red rock
gave the appearance of an architectural work of giant hands.
The wonderful river of silt, the blood-red, mystic and sullen real Colorado,
lay hidden except in one place far away, where it glimmered wanly.
Thousands of colors were blended before my rapt gaze.
Yellow predominated as the walls and cranks
lorded it over the lower cliffs and tables.
Red glared in the sunlight,
green softened these two,
and then purple and violet, grey, blue,
and the darker hues,
shaded away into dim and distinct obscurity.
Excited yells from my companions on the other crag
recalled me to the living aspect of the scene.
Jones was leaning far down in a niche
at seeming great hazard of life,
yelling with all the power of his strong lungs.
Frank stood still further out on a crack point
that made me tremble,
and his yell reinforced Joneses.
From far below rolled up a chorus of thrilling bays and yelps,
and Jim's call faint but distant
on the wonderfully thin air with its unmistakable note of warning.
Then on the slide I saw a lion,
headed for the rim wall, and climbing fast.
I added my exultant cry to the medley, and stretched my arms wide to that illumerable void
that glorified for a moment full to the brim of the tingling joy of existence.
I did not consider how painful it must have been to the toiling lion.
It was only the spell of wild environment, of perilous yellow crags,
of thin, dry air, voices of man and dog, of the stinging expectation of sharp action, of life.
I watched the lion growing bigger and bigger.
I saw Don and Sounder run from the pinion into the open slide
and heard their impetuous burst of wild yelps as they saw their game.
Then Jones's clarion yell made me bound for my horse.
I reached him, was about to mount when Mose came trotting toward me.
Got the old gladdy.
When he heard the chorus from below, he plunged like a mad bull.
With both arms round him I held on.
I vowed never to let him get down that slide.
He howled and tore, but I held on.
My big black horse with ears laid back stood like a rock.
I heard the pattering of little sliding rocks below,
stealthy, padded footsteps, and hard-panning breath,
almost like coughs.
Then a lion passed out of the slide not twenty feet away.
He saw us and sprang into the pinion scrub with the leap of a scared deer.
Samson himself could no longer have held mose.
Away he darted with a sharp, angry bark.
I flung myself upon Satan and rode out to see Jones ahead,
and Frank flashing through the green on the white horse.
At the end of the pinion thicket,
Satan overhauled Jones's bay, and we entered the open forest together.
We saw Frank glinting across the dark pines.
Aye, aye, yelled the colonel.
No need was there to whip or spur these magnificent horses.
They were fresh.
The course was open and smooth as a racetrack,
and the impelling chorus of the hounds was at full blast.
I gave Satan a loose rain,
and he stayed neck and neck with the bay.
There was not a log nor stone nor a gully.
The hollows grew wider and shallower
as we raced along and presently disappeared altogether.
The lion was running straight from the canyon,
and the certainty that he must sooner or later
take to a tree,
brought from me a yell of irresistible wild joy.
Aye, aye, aye, aye, answered Jones.
The whipping wind, with its pine-scented fragrance,
warm as a breath of summer,
was intoxicating as wine.
The huge pines, too kingly for close communication with their kind,
made wide arches under which the horses stretched out long and low,
with supple springly, powerful strides.
Frankshaal, rowing, clear as a bell,
We saw him curved to the right and took his yell as a signal for us to cut across.
Then we began to close in on him, and to hear more distinctly the baying of the hounds.
Aye, high, high, high, high, ball Jones, and his great trumpet voice rolled down the forest glades.
Hi, aye, hi, hi, hi, I screeched in a wild recognition of the spirit of the moment.
Fast as they were flying, the bay in the black, resounded to our cries and quickened,
strained and lengthened under us till the tree sped by and blurs.
There plainly in sight ahead ran the hounds, dawn leading, sounder next,
and mows not fifty yards behind a desperately running lion.
There are all satisfying moments of life.
That chased through the open forest under the stately pines
with the wild tawny quarry in plain sight
and the glad staccato yelps of the hounds filling my ears and swelling my heart,
With the splendid action of my horse carrying me on the wings of the wind
was glorious answer and fullness to the call and hunger of a hunter's blood.
But as such moments must be, they were brief.
The lion leaped gracefully into the air,
splintering the bark from a pine fifteen feet up and crouched on a limb.
The hounds tore madly round a tree.
Full-grown female, said Jones calmly as we dismounted, and she's ours.
We'll call her Kitty.
Kitty was a beautiful creature, long, slender, glossy,
with white belly and black-tipped ears and tail.
She did not resemble the heavy, grim-faced brute
that always hung in the air of my dreams.
A low, brooding, menacing murmur that was not a snarl nor a growl came from her.
She watched the dogs with bright and never so much as looked at us.
The dogs were worth attention, even from us.
who certainly did not need to regard them from her personally hostile point of view.
Don stood straight up with his forepaws beating the air.
He walked on his hind legs like the trained dog in the circus.
He yelped continuously, as if it agonized him to see the lion safe out of his reach.
Sounder had lost his identity.
Joy had unhinged his mind and had made him a dog of double personality.
He had always been unsociable with me.
never responding to my attempts to caress him,
but now he leaped into my arms and licked my face.
He had always hated Jones till that moment
when he raised his paws to his master's breast,
and perhaps more remarkable.
Time and time again he sprang up at Satan's nose,
whether to bite him or kiss him.
I could not tell.
Then old Moes, he of Grand Canyon fame,
made the delirious antics of his canine fellows look cheap.
There was a small, dead.
pine that had fallen against a drooping branch of the tree Kitty had taken refuge in,
and up this narrow ladder, Moes began to climb.
He was fifteen feet up, and Kitty had begun to shift uneasily when Jones saw him.
Hey, you wild coon-chaser, get out of that! Come down, come down!
But Jones might have been in the bottom of the canyon for all Moes heard or cared.
Jones removed his coat, carefully coiled his lasso,
and began to go hand and knee up the leaning pine.
Here, Don Blast you get down, yelled Jones, and he kicked Mose off.
The persistent hound returned and followed Jones to a height of 20 feet,
where he again was thrust off.
Hold him one of you, called Jones.
Not at me, said Frank, I'm looking out for myself.
Same here, I cried with a camera in one hand and a rifle in the other.
Let Mose climb if he likes.
Climb he did to be kicked off again,
But he went back.
It was the way he had.
Jones at last recognized either his own waste of time or Moses' greatness,
for he desisted, allowing the hound to keep close after him.
The cougar, becoming uneasy, stood up, reached for another limb,
climbed out upon it, and peering down, spat hissingly at Jones.
But he kept steadily on with Moves' close on his heels.
I snapped my camera on them when Kitty was not more than fifteen feet above them.
As Jones reached the snag which upheld the leaning tree,
she ran out on her branch and leaped into an adjoining pine.
It was a good long jump, and the weight of the animal bent the limb alarmingly.
Jones backed down and laboriously began to climb the other tree.
As there were no branches low down,
he had to hug the trunk with arms and legs as the boy climbs.
His lasso hampered his progress.
When the slow ascent was accomplished up to the first branch,
Kitty lip back into her first perch.
Strange to say, Jones did not grumble.
None of his characteristic impatient manifested itself here.
I supposed with him all the exasperating weights and vexatious obstacles
were little things preliminary to the real work,
to which he had now come.
He was calm and deliberate,
and slid down the pine, walked back to the leaning tree,
and while resting a moment shook his lasso at Kitty.
This action fitted him somehow.
It was so compatible with his grim assurance.
To me and to Frank also, for that matter,
it was all new and startling,
and we were as excited as the dogs.
We kept continuously moving about.
Frank mounted an eye afoot to get good views of the cougar.
When she crouched as if to leap,
it was almost impossible to remain under the tree,
and we kept moving.
Once more, Jones crept up on hands and knees.
Mose walked the slanting pine, like a rope performer,
Kitty began to grow restless.
This time she showed both anger and impatience,
but did not yet appear frightened.
She growled low and deep, opened her mouth and hissed,
and swung her tufted tail faster and faster.
Look out, look out, Jones, yelled Frank warningly.
Jones, who had reached the trunk of the tree,
halted and slipped round it,
placing between him and Kitty.
She had advanced on her limb, a few feet above Jones,
and threateningly hung over.
Jones backed down a little till she crossed to another branch.
Then he resumed his former position.
What blow? called he.
Hardly any doubt was there as to how we watched.
Frank and I were all eyes except very high and throbbing hearts.
When Jones thrashed the lasso at Kitty,
We both yelled.
She ran out on the branch and jumped.
This time she fell short of her point,
clutched a dead snag which broke,
letting her through a bushy branch from where she hung head downward.
For a second she swung free,
then reaching toward the tree caught it,
with front paws, ran down like a squirrel,
and leaped off when thirty feet from the ground.
The action was as rapid as it was astonishing.
Like a yellow rubber ball,
she bounded up and fled with the yelping hounds at her heels.
The chase was short.
At the end of a hundred yards,
Moes caught up with her and nipped her.
She whirled with savage suddenness and lunged at Moes,
but he cunningly alluded the vicious paws.
Then she sought safety in another pine.
Frank, who was as quick as the hounds,
almost rode them down in his eagerness,
while Jones descended from his perch.
I led the two horses down the forest.
This time the cougar was well out on a long,
low-spreading branch. Jones conceived the idea of raising the loop of his lassoe on a long pole,
but as no pole of sufficient length could be found, he tried from the back of his horse.
The bay walked forward well enough. When, however, he got under the beast and heard her growl,
he reared and almost threw Jones. Frank's horse could not be persuaded to go near the tree.
Satan evinced no fear of the cougar, and without flinching, carried Jones directly beneath the limb,
and stood with ears back and four-legs stiff.
Look at that, look at that, cried Jones,
as the wary cougar pawed the loop aside.
Three successive times did Jones have the lasso
just ready to drop over her neck
when she flashed a yellow paw and knocked the new surrey.
Then she leapt far out over the waiting dog,
struck the ground with a light, sharp thud,
and began to run with the speed of a deer.
Frank's cowboy touring now stood us in good stead.
he was off like a shot and turned the cougar from the direction of the canyon jones lost not a moment in pursuit and i left with jones badly frightened bay got going in time to see the race but not to assist for several hundred yards kitty made the hounds appear slow
don being swiftest gained on her steadily toward the close of the dash and presently was running under her upraised tail on the next jump he nipped her she turned and sent him reeling sounder came flying
up to bite her flank, and at the same moment fierce old moz closed in on her. The next instant,
a struggling mass whirled on the ground. Jones and Frank yelling like demons almost rode over it.
The cougar broke from her assailants, and dashing away, leaped on the first tree. It was a half-dead
pine with short snags low down and a big branch extending out over a ravine.
"'I think we're older now,' said Jones. The tree proved to be a most difficult one to
climb. Jones made several ineffectual attempts before he reached the first limb, which broke,
giving him a hard fall. This calmed me enough to make me take notice of Jones's condition. He was
wet with sweat and covered with a black pitch from the pines. His shirt was slit down the arm,
and there was blood on his temple and his hand. The next attempt began by placing a good-sized log
against a tree and proved to be the necessary help. Jones got hold of the second,
limb and pulled himself up. As he kept on, Kitty crouched low as if to spring upon him.
Again Frank and I sent warning calls to him, but he paid no attention to us or to the cougar,
and continued to climb. This worried Kitty as much as it did us. She began to move on the snags,
stepping from one to another, every moment snarling at Jones, and then she crawled up.
The big branch evidently took her eye. She tried several times to climb.
up to it, but small snags close together made her distrustful. She walked uneasily out upon
two limbs, and as they bent with her weight, she hurried back. Twice she did this, each time
looking up, showing her desire to leap to the big branch. Her distress became plainly evident.
A child could have seen that she feared she would fall. At length in desperation, she spat at Jones,
then ran out and leaped. She all but missed the branch, but succeeded in.
holding to it and swinging to safety.
Then she turned to her tormentor and gave utterance to most savage sounds.
As she did not intimidate her pursuer, she retreated out on the branch,
which sloped down at a deep angle and crouched on a network of small limbs.
When Jones had worked up a little further, he commanded a splendid position for his operations.
Kitty was somewhat below him in a desirable place, yet the branch she was on
joined the tree considerably above his head.
Jones cast his lasso.
It caught on a snag.
Throw after throw he made with like result.
He recoiled and recast 19 times to my count
when Frank made his suggestion.
Rope those dead snags and break them off.
This practical idea, Joan soon carried out,
which left him a clear path.
The next fling of the lariat
caused the cougar angrily to shake her head.
Again, Jones sent the news flying.
She pulled it off her back and bit it savagely.
Though very much excited I tried hard to keep sharp,
keen faculties alert,
so as not to miss a single detail of the thrilling scene.
But I must have failed,
for all of a sudden I saw how Jones was standing in the tree,
something I had not before appreciated.
He had one handhold which he could not use
while recoiling the lasso,
and his feet rested upon a precariously frail-appearing dead-send.
snag. He made eleven cast of the lasso, all of which bothered Kitty, but did not catch her.
The twelfth caught her front paw. Jones jerked so quickly and hard that he almost lost his balance,
and he pulled the noose off. Patiently, he recoiled the lasso. That's what I want. If I can get
her her front paw, she's ours. My idea is to pull her off the limb, let her hang there,
and then lasso or hang legs. Another cast, the unlikely 13th, settled to loop perfectly.
perfectly round her neck. She chewed on the rope with her front teeth and appeared to have difficulty in holding it.
Easy, easy, easy. Who's that rope? Easy, yelled the cowboy. Cautiously, Jones took up the slack and slowly
tightened the news. Then with a quick jerk fastened it close around her neck. We heralded this
achievement with yells of triumph that made the forest ring. Triumph was short-lived. Jones had hardly
moved when the cougar shot straight out into the air.
The lassoe caught on a branch, hauling her up short, and there she hung in mid-air, writhing,
struggling, and giving utterance to sounds terribly human.
For several seconds, she swang, slowly descending, in which frenzied time,
I, with ruling passion uppermost, endeavored to snap a picture of her.
The unintelligible commands Jones was yelling to Frank and Meese ceased suddenly,
with a sharp crack of breaking wood, then crash.
Jones fell out of the tree.
The lasso streaked up, ran over the limb, while the cougar dropped hellmell into the bunch of
waiting, howling dogs.
The next few moments, it was impossible for me to distinguish what actually transpired.
A great flutter of leaves whirled round a swiftly changing ball of brown and black and yellow,
from which came a fiendish clamor.
Then I saw Jones plunge down the ravine and bounce here and there in mad efforts to catch
the whipping lasso.
He was roaring in a way that made all his former yells merely whispers.
Starting to run, I tripped on a route, fell prone on my face.
face into the ravine and rolled over and over until I brought up with a bump against a rock.
What a tabloo riveted my gaze. It staggered me so I did not think of my camera. I stood transfixed,
not fifteen feet from the cougar. She sat on her haunches, with body well drawn back by the taut
lasso to which Jones held tightly. Don was standing up with her, upheld by the hook claws in
and said, the cougar had her paws outstretched, her mouth open wide, showing long, cruel,
white fangs. She was trying to pull the head of the dog to her. Don held back with all his
power, and so did Jones. Moes and Sounder were tussling around her body. Suddenly both ears of the
dog pulled out, slit into ribbons. Don had never uttered a sound, and once free, he made
at her again with open jaws. One blow sent him reeling and stunned, then began again,
that wrestling whirl.
Beat off the dogs, beat off the dogs,
Lord Jones. She'll kill them, she'll kill them.
Frank and I seized clubs and ran in upon the confused, furry mass,
forgetful of peril to ourselves.
In the wild congregation of such a savage moment,
the minds of men revert wholly to primitive instincts.
We swung our clubs and yelled.
We fought all over the bottom of the ravine,
crashing through the brushes, over logs and stones.
I actually felt the soft fur of the cougar
at one fleeting instant.
The dogs had the strength born of insane fighting spirit.
At last, we pulled them to where Don lay half-stunned,
and with an arm tight round each,
I held them while Frank turned to help Jones.
The disheveled Jones, bloody, grim as death his heavy jaw locked,
stood holding to the lasso.
The cougar, her side shaking with short quick pants,
crouched low on the ground with eyes of purple fire.
For God's sake, get a half-haping!
"'hitch on that sapling!' cried the cowboy.
His quick grasp of the situation averted a tragedy.
Jones was nearly exhausted,
even as he was beyond thinking for himself or giving up.
The cougar sprang a yellow, frightful flash.
Even as she was in the air,
Jones took a quick step to one side and dodged
as he threw his lasso around to the sapling.
She missed him.
But one alarmingly outstretched prae gazed his shoulder.
A twist of Jones' big hand fastened a lasso.
and Kitty was a prisoner.
While she fought rolled, twisted, bounded, whirled,
and with hissing, snarling fury,
Jones sat mopping the sweat and blood from his face.
Kitty's efforts were futile.
She began to weaken from the choking.
Jones took another rope,
and tightening a noose round her back paws,
which he lassued, as she rolled over, he stretched her out.
She began to contract her supple body,
gave a savage convulsive spring,
which pulled Jones flat on the,
the ground, then the terrible wrestling started again. The lasso slipped over her back paws. She
leaped the whole length of the other lasso. Jones caught it and fastened it more securely,
but this precaution proved unnecessary, for she suddenly sank down either exhausted or choked,
and gasped with her tongue hanging out. Frank slipped the second noose over her back paws,
and Jones did likewise with a third lassoe over her right front paws. These lassoes, Jones tied to
different saplings.
Now, you're a good kitty, said Jones, kneeling by her.
He took a pair of clippers from his hip pocket, and grasping upon his powerful fist,
he calmly clipped the points of the dangerous claws.
This done, he called to me to get the collar and chain that were tied to his saddle.
I procured them and hurried back.
Then the old buffalo hunter loosened a lasso which was round her neck,
and as soon as she could move her head, he teased her to bite a club.
She broke two good sticks with her sharp teeth, but the third, being solid, did not break.
While she was chewing it, Jorns forced her head back and placed his heavy knee on the club.
In a twinkling, he had strapped the collar around her neck.
The chain made fast to the sampling.
After removing the club from her mouth, he placed his knee on her neck,
and while her head was in this helpless position,
he dexterously slipped a loop of thick copper wire over her nose,
pushed it back, and twisted it tight.
Following this, all done with speed and precision,
he took from his pocket a piece of steel rod,
perhaps one quarter of an inch thick and five inches long.
He pushed this between Kitty's jaws,
just back of her great white fangs,
and in front of the copper wire.
She had been shorn of her sharp weapons.
She was muzzled, bound, helpless, and object to pity.
Lastly, Jones removed the three lassoes.
Kitty slowly gathered her lissom body in a ball
and lay panting with the same brave white.
wildfire in her eyes.
Joan stroked her black-tipped ears
and ran his hand down her glossy
fur. All the time he had
kept up a low monotone talking to her
in the strange language he used
toward animals. Then he rose
to his feet.
We'll go back to camp now and get a
pack-sadlin horse, he said.
She'll be safe here. We'll rope her again,
tie her up, throw her over pack-sadling,
take her to camp.
To my utter bewilderment,
the hound suddenly commence fighting among
themselves. Of all the vicious bloody dog fights I ever saw, that was the worst. I began to belabor
them with a club, and Frank sprang to my assistants. Beating had no apparent effect.
We broke a dozen sticks, and then Frank grappled with Moes and I was sounder. Don kept on
fighting either one till Jones secured him. Then we all took a rest, panting and weary.
What's it mean, I jacked you that? Appealing to Jones.
"'Jalous, that's all.
"'Jalous over the lion!'
"'We all remain seated,
"'men and hounds a sweaty, dirty, bloody,
"'rackard group.
"'I discovered I was sorry for Kitty.
"'I forgot all the carcasses of deer and horses,
"'the brutality of this species of cat,
"'and even forgot the grim, snarling yellow devil
"'that had leaped at me.
"'Kitty was beautiful and helpless.
"'How brave she was, too.
"'No sign of fear shown in her wonderful eyes,
"'only hate, defiance, watchful,
On the ride back to camp, Jones expressed himself thus,
Oh, happy I am that I can keep this lion, and the others we are going to capture for my own.
When I was in the Yellowstone Park, I did not get to keep one of the many I captured.
The military officials took them from me.
When we reached camp, Lawson was absent, but fortunately old Baldy browsed near at hand and was easily caught.
Frank said he would rather take Old Baldy for the cougar
than any other horse we had.
Leaving me in camp, he and Jones rode off to fetch Kitty.
About five o'clock they came trotting up through the forest with Jim,
who had fallen in with them on the way.
Old Baldy had remained true to his fame, nothing.
Not even a cougar bothered him.
Kitty evidently no worse for her experience
was chained to a pine tree about fifty feet from the campfire.
Wallace came riding wearily in,
and when he saw the captive he greeted us with an exultant yell,
he got there just in time to see the first special features of Kitty's captivity.
The hound surrounded her and could not be called off.
We had to beat them.
Whereupon the six jealous canines fell to fighting among themselves
and fought so savagely as to be deaf to our cries and insensible to blows.
They had to be torn apart and chained.
About six o'clock, Lawson loped in with the horses.
Of course, he did not know we had a cougar,
and no one seemed interested enough to inform him.
Perhaps only Frank and I thought of it,
but I saw Mary Snap in Frank's eyes and kept silence.
Kidney had hidden behind the pine tree.
Lawson astride Jim's pack horse, a crotchety animal,
reined in just a breast of the tree and leisurely threw his leg over the saddle.
Kitty leaped out to the extent of her chain and fairly exploded.
in a frightful cat's spit.
Lawson had stated some time before
that he was afraid of cougars,
which was a weakness he need not have
divulged in view of what happened.
The horse plunged, throwing him
ten feet and snorting in terror,
stampeded with the rest of the bunch
and disappeared among the pines.
Why the hell didn't you tell a feller?
Reproachfully growled the Arizonan.
Frank and Jim held each other upright
and the rest of us gave way to his hearty,
if not as violent mirth.
We had a gay supper during which Kitty sat by her pine
and watched our every movement.
I will rest up for a day or two, said Jones.
Things have commenced to come our way, if I may not mistaken.
We'll bring an old Tom alive into camp.
But it would never do for us to get a big Tom in the fix we had Kitty today.
You see, I wanted to lassoo a front paw,
pull her off the limb, tie my end of the lasso to a tree,
and while she hung I'd go down and rope her hind paws.
It all went wrong today and was a tough job as I ever handled.
Not until late next morning did Lawson corral all the horses.
That next day we lounged in camp, mending broken saddle, bridles, stirrups,
lassoes, boots, trousers, leggings, shirts, and even broken shins.
During this time I found Kitty a most interesting study.
She reminded me of an enormous yellow kitten.
She did not appear wild or untamed.
until approached. Then she slowly sank down, laid back her ears, opened her mouth and hissed
and spat. At the same time, throwing both paws out viciously. Kitty may have rested, but did not
sleep. At time she fought her chain, tuggling and straining at it, and trying to bite it through.
Everything in reach she clawed, particularly the bark of the tree. Once she tried to hang herself
by leaping over a low limb. When anyone walked by her, she crouched low, evidently.
imagining herself unseen. If one was walked toward her or looked at her, she did not crouch.
At other times, noticeably, when no one was near, she would roll on her back and extend all four
paws in the air. Her actions were beautiful, soft, noiseless, quick and subtle. The day passed,
as all days pass in camp, swiftly and pleasantly, and twilight stole down upon us round the ruddy
fire. The wind roared in the pines and lulled to repose. The loathsome, friendly coyote barked.
The bells on the hobble horses jingled sweetly. The great watch stars blinked out of the blue.
The red glow of the burning logs lighted up Jones's calm, cold face. Tranquil, unartable,
and peaceful it seemed. Yet beneath the peace I thought I saw a suggestion of wild restraint,
of mystery of unslaked life.
Strangely enough, his next word confirmed my last thought.
For forty years I've had an ambition.
To get possession of an island in the Pacific
somewhere between Vancouver and Alaska
and go to Siberia and capture a lot of Russian sables.
I'd put them on the island and cross them with our silver foxes.
I'm going to try it next year if I can find the time.
The ruling passion and character determined our lives.
Jones was 63 years old,
yet the thing that had ruled and absorbed his mind was still as strong
as a longing for freedom in Kitty's wild heart.
Hours after I had crawled into my sleeping bag in the silence of night,
I heard her working to get free.
In darkness, she was most active, restless, intense.
I heard the clink of her chain, the crack of her teeth,
the scrape of her claws.
How tireless she was.
I recalled the wistful light in her eyes that saw, no doubt,
far beyond the campfire to the yellow crags,
to the great downland slopes, to freedom.
I slipped my elbow out of the bag and raised myself.
Dark shadows were hovering under the pines.
I saw Kitty's eyes gleam like sparks,
and I seemed to see in it the hate, the fear, the terror.
he had of the clanking that bound her.
I shivered, perhaps from the cold night wind,
which moaned through the pines,
I saw the stars glittering pale and far off,
and under their wan light the still-set face of Jones
and blacketed forms of my other companions.
The last thing I remembered before dropping into dreamless slumber
was hearing a bell tinkle in the forest,
which I recognized as one I had placed on Satan.
End of Chapter 16.
Chapter 17 of The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray.
This number of box recording is in the public domain,
recording by Mike Vendetti, Mike Vendetti.com.
The Last of the Plainsman by Zane Gray.
Chapter 17. Conclusion.
Kitty was not the only cougar brought into camp alive.
The ensuing days were fruitful of cougars and adventure.
There were more wild rides to the music of the being-hound.
and more heartbreaking canyon slopes to conquer,
and more swinging, tufted tails
and snarling savage faces and opinions.
Once again, I am sorry to relate,
I had to glance down the sights of the Little Remington,
and I saw blood on the stones.
Those eventful days sped by all too soon.
When the time for parting came,
it took no little discussion to decide
on the quickest way of getting me to a railroad.
I never fully appreciated the inexatious,
of the sea wash, until the question arose of finding a way out. To return on our back
trail would require two weeks, and to go out by the trail north to Utah met half as much
time over the same kind of desert. Lawson came to our help, however, with the information
that an occasional prospector or horse hunter crossed a canyon from the saddle, where a trail
led down to the river. I've heard the trail is a bad one, said Lawson, and though I never
seen it, I reckon it could be found. After we get to saddle, we'll build two fires on one side
of the high points and keep them burning well after dark. Mr. Bass, who lives on the other side,
sees the fires. He'll come down his trail next morning and meet us at the river. He keeps the boat
there. This is taking a chance, but I reckon it's worthwhile. So it was decided that Lawson and Frank
would try to get me out by way of the canyon. Wallace intended to go by the Utah,
route, and Jones was to return at once to his range and his buffalo. That night round the campfire
we talked over the many incidents of the hunt. Jones stated he had never in his life come so near.
Getting his everlasting is when the Big Bay horse tripped on a canyon slope and rolled over him.
Notwithstanding the respect with which we regarded his statement, we held different opinions.
Then with the unfailing optimism of hunters, we planned another hunt for the next year.
I'll tell you what, said Jones.
Up in Utah, there's a wild region called Pink Cliffs.
Few poor sheepherders try to raise sheep in the valleys.
They wouldn't be so poor if they were not for the grizzly
at black bears that live on the sheep.
We'll go up there and find a place
where grass and water can be had in camp.
We'll notify the sheepherters.
We are there for business.
Well, be only too glad to hustle in with news of a bear,
and we can get the hounds on the trail,
my son up. I'll have a dozen hounds then, maybe twenty. All hands well trained. We'll put every black bear
we chase up a tree and we'll rope and tie him. As the grizzlies, well, I'm not saying so much.
They can't climb trees and they're afraid of a pack of hounds. We rounded up a grizzly, got him
cornered, and threw a rope on him. It'd be some fun, huh, Jim?
Sure to wood, Jim replied. On the strength of this, I stored up
food for future thought, and thus reconciled myself to bidding farewell to the purple canyons
and shaggy slopes of buckskin mountain. At five o'clock next morning we were all stirring. Jones yelled
to hounds and untangled kitty's chain. Jim was already busy with the biscuit dough. Frank shook
the frost off the saddles. Wallace was packing. The merry jangle of bells came from the forest.
Presently Lawson appeared driving in the horses. Caught me black and saddled him, then realizing we
were soon to part, I could not resist, giving him a hug.
An hour later, we all stood at the head of the trail, leading down into the chasm.
The east gleamed rosy red, Powell's plateau, loomed up in the distance, and under it showed
the dark fringe dip in the rim called the saddle.
Blue mist floated round the maces and domes.
Lawson led the way down the trail. Frank started old Baldy with the pack.
Come, he called.
Be losing along.
I called the last goodbye and turned Satan into the narrow trail.
When I looked back, Jones stood on the rim with the fresh glow,
dawn shining on his face.
The trail was steep and claimed my attention and care.
But time and time again, I gazed back.
Jones waved his hand till a huge juttering cliff walled him from view.
Then I cast my eyes on the rough descent and the wonderful void beneath me.
In my mind lingered a pleasing consciousness of my last,
sight of the old plainsman. He fitted to scene. He belonged there among the silent pines and the yellow
crags. The end. End of the last plains by Zane Gray.
