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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60458 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60458)
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-Project Gutenberg's Midnight, by Rutherford George Montgomery (1894-1985)
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Midnight
-
-Author: Rutherford George Montgomery (1894-1985)
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2019 [EBook #60458]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIDNIGHT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Laura Brown and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE AUTHOR
-
-
-Rutherford Montgomery would rather write than do anything else in the
-world. Most of his books are about animals and the wilderness he knows
-so well. As a boy, Mr. Montgomery would listen to the tales told by
-hunters, and his favorite sport then and now is going into the woodland
-and sitting quietly on a log, observing the children of the wild. He is
-a watcher, not a hunter.
-
-Mr. Montgomery was born in North Dakota, and taught school for
-ten years in Wyoming and Colorado after graduating from Colorado
-Agricultural College. He saw service in the United States Flying Corps
-in World War I. Later, he was a county judge in Colorado and held state
-offices there. He now lives in Los Gatos, California.
-
- * * *
-
-Other Books by Rutherford Montgomery
-
- Broken Fang[A]
- Gray Wolf[A]
- White Mountaineer
- McGonigle’s Lake
- Yellow Eyes[A]
- Kildee House
- Big Brownie
- Ghost Town Adventure[A]
-
- [A] _Available from Scholastic Book Services_
-
-
-
-
-MIDNIGHT
-
- RUTHERFORD MONTGOMERY
-
- =SBS= SCHOLASTIC BOOK SERVICES
- New York Toronto London Auckland Sydney
-
-
-
-
- To Earl Hammock
- who knows the value of
- the lonesome places
-
-
-This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not be resold,
-lent, or otherwise circulated in any binding or cover other than that
-in which it is published--unless prior written permission has been
-obtained from the publisher--and without a similar condition, including
-this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
-
-Copyright 1940 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. Illustrations
-copyright 1949 by Pocket Books, Inc. This edition is published by
-Scholastic Book Services, a division of Scholastic Magazines, Inc., by
-arrangement with Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.
-
- 8th Printing November 1969
-
- Printed in the U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- 1. Pals 1
-
- 2. Wild Horse 10
-
- 3. Horse Thief 20
-
- 4. Desert Winter 25
-
- 5. Wild-Horse Drive 36
-
- 6. Midnight 45
-
- 7. The Way of the High Country 62
-
- 8. The Strong Survive 75
-
- 9. Prisoner 87
-
- 10. Escape 94
-
- 11. New Trails 108
-
- 12. Doom of the Band 120
-
- 13. Tex Takes the Trail 140
-
- 14. Beside the Castle Rocks 147
-
- 15. Home to Stay 151
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Midnight tried to whirl but the ledge was too narrow.]
-
-
-
-
-1. Pals
-
-
-Sam was meditating. Tipped back in a chair made of river alder and
-willow, he leaned against the log wall of his cabin. His shoeless feet
-were swathed in wrinkled socks of the kind that come to a point at the
-toe where a tuft of thread keeps the cotton yarn from unraveling. Sam’s
-blue shirt was faded from too many washings in the creek below the
-cabin. The only unfaded portions of the shirt were hidden by his wide,
-yellow suspenders.
-
-Sam’s tired, blue eyes stared out over his “stompin’ ground,” which
-was a high mesa overlooking the blue depths of Shadow Canyon. Across
-the mesa meandered a chain of castle rocks. This outcropping was red
-and yellow in color. It stood on edge, silent evidence of the upheaval
-which had formed the Crazy Kill Mountains millions of years before.
-Sam’s toothless gums clamped down on the stem of his cold pipe. Keeping
-the pipe right side up was the heaviest work Sam planned for that
-morning.
-
-Out in a lush meadow which crowded like a green carpet around the
-castle rocks there was plenty of healthy contrast to the lazy
-inactivity that filled Sam. He let his eyes wander fondly over the
-scene. Up near the base of the biggest castle five fat yellowbelly
-whistlers romped about among the rocks. A sixth sat like a round ball
-of silver fur, perched on the top of a high rock. The old rockchuck on
-guard was as relaxed and lazy as Sam, except for his beady eyes. Those
-eyes saw everything that moved, as far away as the spruce woods which
-bordered the upper side of the mesa.
-
-Sam studied the yellowbelly whistlers with a spark of interest in
-his faded eyes. They were yellowish animals with long, silvery hairs
-covering their brown coats, giving them a shining appearance when they
-romped in the sun. They had dark-brown heads and tails, and a whitish
-band across their faces. They rolled through the grass and over the
-rocks, front end up, hind end up, rocking along on their stubby legs.
-
-Many smaller fellows courted the protection of the yellowbellies,
-making good use of the sharp eyes of the sentinel whistler perched high
-on his lookout. A dozen rockchips dodged about in the grass while as
-many more sat on little rocks and stared away toward the snow-capped
-peaks of the Crazy Kill Range. These potbellied little brownies of the
-high country were well content with the crumbs from the great one’s
-table. The keen eyes and the ready blast of warning from the high rock
-removed their chief worries. The sentinel whistler was sure to announce
-the arrival of the swift-hawk, the laughing coyote, the martens, or the
-bobcat. There were many other enemies of the air and the forest and the
-whistler watched for and spotted all of them.
-
-Then there was the calico chip, a two-striped ground squirrel whose
-vast energy always made Sam feel tired. The calico chips dashed about
-with an energy which had undoubtedly been intended for some much larger
-animal, but must have been misplaced when Mother Nature laid out the
-blueprints of creation. The calico chips were always too busy chasing
-bugs or gathering and storing seeds to pause for meditation. They
-left foolish gawking into space to the potbellied rockchips. But their
-little ears were always tuned to catch the warning blast of the big
-whistler.
-
-There was a sprinkling of lesser chipmunks, a dozen or more. Sam noted
-with satisfaction that their number was increasing. He had brought
-two pairs in with him several summers before. They were active, noisy
-little fellows, dashing about, hoisting their tails like flags when
-they came to a halt. Every so often one of them would dash to a rock
-and jump on top of it. He would sit very straight and burst into song.
-
-“Chock! Chock! Chock!” in quick succession, like the rattle of an old
-alarm clock. Sometimes the song would be pitched higher and would go
-“Check, check, check, chir-r-r-up!” No sooner had one chipmunk mounted
-his song perch than all the others would dart to theirs, always the
-same perches. The meadow would ring with their chorus.
-
-Their round of music never failed to disturb the fat sentinel whistler.
-He would shake his silver robe, stretch his neck, then blast three
-short, sharp notes on his whistle, after which he would settle back
-with a deep chuckle.
-
-Sam’s pipe always rolled to the corner of his mouth and turned upside
-down when the chorus began. One fumbling hand would pull out his
-ancient, silver watch and he would fix his gaze fiercely on the second
-hand. From the chorus he would select one voice and count the “chocks”
-while he timed the singer. One hundred and seventy “chocks” per minute
-was the best time he had ever recorded. The poorest, seventy per
-minute, was made by a fellow whose little round belly hinted that he
-might have a bit of rockchip blood in him.
-
-From far down the meadow, where a clear stream foamed over ragged
-rocks, came the eager whinny of a horse. Sam’s eyes lighted, and he
-shoved the big, silver watch into his pocket. Up the meadow galloped a
-trim black mare. Her mane flowed in the wind as she shook her head, and
-kicked her heels recklessly.
-
-“Purty, right purty,” Sam muttered as he took his pipe out of his mouth.
-
-The trim mare slowed to a trot as she neared the cabin. With a toss
-of her head and a playful leap to one side, she trotted up to Sam and
-extended her soft muzzle, nickering eagerly.
-
-“Mornin’, Lady Ebony,” Sam said affectionately. “Think mebby ol’ Sam’s
-got a lump o’ sugar?”
-
-Lady Ebony pawed and nickered.
-
-Sam dug a hand into his pants pocket and brought out two dingy lumps of
-sugar. He dusted off a grain or two of tobacco and a little chaff, then
-held one of them out.
-
-“Jest a bite, ol’ gal,” he said.
-
-Lady Ebony picked the sugar from between his thumb and finger with a
-dainty movement of her lips. She crunched the lump eagerly, and when it
-was gone she pricked her ears forward and pawed.
-
-Sam grinned widely. “Dang me, if you can’t count,” he said.
-
-The other lump of sugar was extended and Lady Ebony took it. Sam let
-the forelegs of the chair down and got to his feet stiffly. He patted
-the glistening neck of the mare and talked softly to her. Lady Ebony
-accepted the caresses. Sam sat down again and the mare nosed around the
-cabin door a while before trotting out into the meadow where she set to
-feeding on the tall grass.
-
-The yellowbelly on the lookout perch paid no attention to the mare. The
-calico chips and the chipmunks went on chasing bugs and hunting seeds.
-They knew the black mare was a friend and that her enemies were their
-enemies, the cougar and the gray wolf.
-
-Sam sucked on his pipe. His eyes followed Lady Ebony. Ever since she
-was a wobbly colt she had summered in this high pasture. She carried
-the brand of Major Howard, an Easterner who had come west to raise
-cattle and horses. He had many horses on the range and paid little
-attention to any but his purebreds which he kept at the ranch in the
-valley. But Sam knew a fine horse. He had owned many slim, tough
-saddlers like the black mare. He was too old and stiff to ride but he
-wanted to own the black mare, just to have her as a pal. He had babied
-her and petted her until she was devoted to him.
-
-Sam looked into the cold bowl of his pipe. He wanted to smoke, but
-his tobacco was inside the cabin. It was a terrible nuisance the way
-he forgot things like that. His eyes shifted to the fat sentinel on
-the rock. The yellowbelly was sitting up very straight. Suddenly he
-shook himself and whistled shrilly. Instantly the calico chips, the
-rockchips, and the chipmunks vanished into the grass. The feeding
-whistlers romped to their holes at the base of the biggest castle rock.
-
-“Tarnation!” Sam muttered angrily. He reached back inside his door, and
-dragged out an ancient single-barreled shotgun. Laying the gun across
-his knees he squinted up into the sky.
-
-“Thet durn hawk’s been askin’ fer it,” he muttered.
-
-But the danger signal did not herald an air raid. Sam heard the
-thudding of ironshod hoofs. He did not bother to turn around. A
-horseman galloped up to his door and halted. The rider bent down and
-greeted Sam.
-
-“Morning, Sam.”
-
-“Mornin’, major,” Sam answered. A slow grin parted his straggling beard.
-
-Major Howard’s gray eyes roved over the meadow, and came to rest on
-the black mare. The major was an energetic, hot-tempered person who
-rode hard and drove hard bargains. The easy way of the western mountain
-people irritated him. He respected Sam’s squatter rights to the mesa
-and the old cabin because he had more grass than he needed.
-
-“I was wonderin’, major,” Sam began slowly, “if you wouldn’t sell me
-that black mare. I’d kind of like to have her. Got a feeling like she’s
-a pal, havin’ her here so much.”
-
-The major laughed and his gray eyes moved back to Sam’s face. “That
-mare is purebred racing stock, Sam. I never paid much attention to her
-until I saw her on the run the other day. She’s fast, the fastest thing
-I have loose on the range. This fall she’ll clean up the cow-pony races
-at the state fair.” The major chuckled.
-
-“Me and the filly has hit it off right nice. I thought mebby you’d sell
-her,” Sam said gently.
-
-The major looked down at Sam and his eyes twinkled. “Tell you what,
-Sam,” he said jokingly. “I never had anything I wouldn’t sell if I got
-my price. I’ll sell you that black filly for five hundred dollars.” He
-bent forward until the saddle horn creased his ample waistline. “But I
-get to race her at the fair.”
-
-Sam grunted. “Reckon I may take you up,” he said slowly.
-
-The major kept his face straight. He was sure Sam didn’t have ten
-dollars to his name. The old prospector always managed to scratch
-together enough dust to buy a few groceries, but never had more than
-that. He nodded his head. This would be a good joke to tell the boys
-at the ranch. His eyes dropped to the ancient shotgun, and to keep
-from laughing he asked abruptly:
-
-“What have you been shooting?”
-
-“Got her charged with rock salt an’ bird shot,” Sam explained
-seriously. “Makes an ol’ gray wolf hit it lickety-split. And one of
-them swift-hawks shore claws air fit to shake out his tail feathers
-when I tech him up.” He grinned widely.
-
-The major nodded. “Glad you keep that gun handy. It will keep wolves
-and cougars away from the mare.” He recalled stories the old hands
-on the ranch told about Sam’s youthful prowess with a carbine and a
-forty-five Colt. He supposed the old prospector’s eyes were so bad he
-had to use a scatter-gun.
-
-“Got a shank o’ venison on the stove. Cold, but makes right nice
-chawin’,” Sam said hospitably, but he didn’t move.
-
-“Thanks, but I’ll have to be hitting the trail. I want to ride down
-along the west drift fence today.” The major clicked his tongue, and
-touched the flanks of his spirited horse with his spurs. He galloped
-away over the meadow.
-
-Sam sat looking out across the waving grass. Five hundred dollars. And
-he hadn’t missed the amusement which greeted his offer to buy the mare.
-Sam was irritated. He wanted the filly more than ever now. He smiled
-and mumbled to himself.
-
-“The major’s goin’ to be plumb surprised when I dish out that five
-hundred.”
-
-He got stiffly to his feet and moved into the cabin. Setting the old
-gun just inside the door he took a muslin sack from the table and
-filled his pipe. Then he absent-mindedly laid the sack back where it
-had been. He shuffled about the room looking at the objects he had
-hung on the walls, a worn horseshoe, a belt with a holster containing
-a forty-five Colt of the frontier model, several bright pictures cut
-from calendars. Finally he remembered he hadn’t lighted his pipe. He
-shuffled to where a packing box was nailed to the wall back of the
-stove and got several matches from a rusty tomato can. After lighting
-the pipe he puffed contentedly.
-
-That day Sam stirred around more than usual. He made up a pack of food
-and small articles which he wrapped in a blanket roll. The pack was set
-beside the door. The job took up most of the afternoon.
-
-The next morning Sam was up early. Lady Ebony came galloping across the
-meadow for her morning ration of lump sugar. As he gave it to her he
-talked in a low, confidential voice to the mare.
-
-“I don’t reckon nobody but you and me knows that ol’ Sam’s got him
-a claim back under the rim.” He chuckled. “Reckon, Lady, it’ll take
-ol’ Sam ’bout three weeks to pan out five hundred in yaller dust.” He
-patted her sleek, black neck. “You jest stay around here an’ wait in
-this medder where there’s good grass. The ol’ yallerbelly’ll keep an
-eye out for wolves and cougars.”
-
-The mare watched as he shouldered his pack and trudged slowly up the
-slope. She did not follow him, but she nickered several times. At the
-edge of the spruce Sam turned around and waved his arm.
-
-Lady Ebony arched her neck and trotted out into the meadow. The fat
-whistler on the high rock chuckled and his beady eyes twinkled brightly
-as he watched her. The sun wheeled higher, warming the grass, drinking
-up the dew. The black mare wandered down the meadow. She came to a halt
-near a sharp ledge which broke off into Shadow Canyon. From the blue
-depths rose the roar of Crazy River. Lady Ebony stirred uneasily. A
-feeling of deep unrest filled her, an urge to run far, to seek other
-horses. After a time she wandered back into the meadow and began
-feeding, but she jerked up her head often, listening, staring into the
-twilight of the spruce.
-
-A few yards from where the black mare fed, a little hill lifted
-semibarren, yellow clay. It stood in sharp contrast to the lushness of
-the green meadow. On this round knob a prairie-dog town was located.
-The main section of the village was a busy scene, with dogs moving,
-bellies close to the ground, in quick sprints from one grass patch
-to another or romping through the meadow grass. Sam had brought
-several pairs of dogs to the mesa. He liked the busy little fellows
-and had been lonesome until he had a town started. The dogs posted
-sentinels but they could not see far. The dog sentinels depended on the
-yellowbelly. They listened for his blasting whistle of warning.
-
-One of the sentinels sat on a mound. His short tail jerked, but no
-other part of him moved. Suddenly the air was split by the warning
-whistle of the big sentinel on the high rock. The dog sentinels
-repeated the warning in a wild chorus of “skr-skrr’s.” Dogs raced in
-from the meadow. They paused for a moment to sit upright on their
-mounds, then they went down their slides to the tunnels below the
-ground. Out from the ground came their defiant voices, “squit-tuck!
-squit-tuck!”
-
-A lank coyote stepped out of a clump of rose brier close to the spruce
-woods. He stood gazing disgustedly over the meadow, his green eyes
-watching the yellowbellies as they romped to their dens at the base
-of the castle rocks. The whistlers had warned the dogs and ground
-squirrels of his presence. He ran at a lope across the meadow. Lady
-Ebony snorted and shook her head as he passed. Her eyes followed the
-glinting sun on his fur. When he had vanished down the trail which led
-into Shadow Canyon she returned to her feeding.
-
-
-
-
-2. Wild Horse
-
-
-High up under the snow rims, where the grass was short but rich with
-moss and lichens, lay a little lake. Its upper shore line was formed
-by a barren rockslide which tumbled down from the naked cliffs above
-timber line, its lower edge was fringed with spruce and balsam. Below
-the lake nestled a little meadow. On this meadow fed a band of twenty
-horses.
-
-At the head of this band of wild horses ran a chestnut stallion, a
-heavy-chested, thick-legged fellow with a splashed white star in his
-forehead. His protruding eyes were set wide apart and his heavy jaws
-and massive neck showed his battling qualities, while his wide chest
-and thick barrel indicated great strength.
-
-The chestnut stud moved restlessly as he fed, jerking up his head,
-listening, testing the air with flaring nostrils. The mares with their
-colts close beside them cropped the short grass, content to let him
-keep a wary watch for danger.
-
-And there was danger ahead on every trail. There was the lank cougar
-whose desire for colt flesh was greater than any urge in his tawny body
-except the hot flames that fired him when the mating call floated up
-through the twilight under the high spruce. There was the wolf pack,
-not so dangerous in summer but always ready to kill. The chestnut
-stallion knew that at this season the old lobos would be running with
-their sons and daughters in bachelor packs. They were training their
-young to kill and would attack any colt or mare that strayed far from
-the band. There was the bear gone killer, the brute who had deserted
-his vegetable diet and turned killer. He was not a common enemy, but
-one that was terrible in savage lust for slaughter. Lastly, there was
-the most dreaded enemy of all, man.
-
-The chestnut had learned that man was the most ruthless and dangerous
-of the killers. He walked upright and his eyes were in front of his
-head, not at the side as in animals who do not kill but are pursued by
-the killers. The ranchers did not like wild horses because they ate the
-range grass and often crossed with the ranch mares, who then brought
-forth scrubby, worthless colts, mean and useless as saddle stock. The
-chestnut stallion stole mares from the range when he could coax or
-drive them from their pastures. With savage daring he led his band into
-the tall-grass range in the summer. If the cowboys with their rifles
-hunted him too persistently he faded away to a distant range down in
-the desert. In this he was like the lobo wolf. When poison and traps
-and guns become too evident an old lobo shifts his range.
-
-The chestnut stallion had begun to feel that it was time for him to
-lead his band out of the Crazy Kill country. He was being steadily
-hunted. Rifles spat in the misty dawn, riders swooped down on the mares
-when they came out into the open to feed. Major Howard had given orders
-to kill or run the wild band off his range. He wanted no crossing of
-his good stock. At first he had played with the idea of having the
-chestnut stud brought in alive, but his riders could not trap or outrun
-the big fellow in the rough, broken country. There were too many
-avenues of escape, too many canyons and tangled mats of down timber. So
-the major gave the order to shoot the big stud and to exterminate his
-band.
-
-The steady drives and constant ambushes had thinned the ranks of the
-band from thirty to twenty mares. The big stallion was ready to leave
-the tall-grass country. He jerked up his head and snorted shrilly, then
-he circled the herd at a fast trot. When he had gone once around it he
-halted and stood listening, rigid, his head up, his mane flowing in the
-wind. He heard a rock rattle from a trail above; then he saw a man. The
-man was on foot and he was toiling upward, a pack strapped on his back.
-He did not seem to be interested in the band of wild horses, but the
-wind carried a strong man smell to the meadow. The scent was rank with
-the odor of an old pipe.
-
-The chestnut stallion laid back his ears and bared his teeth. With a
-shrill warning he lunged at the rump of the nearest mare. She whinnied
-with fright as she galloped away. The stallion drove the other mares
-into a thundering stampede. They charged across the meadow and into the
-timber, the colts bounding along at their mothers’ sides.
-
-As soon as they were in deep cover the chestnut took the lead. He
-headed up a steep trail and did not stop until the band had reached a
-saddle in the snow range. Here he halted to let the mares and colts
-blow. The colts shouldered against their mothers, their pink noses and
-lips reaching under sweat-streaked flanks in search of milk. Their
-curly tails bobbed and jerked as they drank. The mares looked up at the
-snow peaks out of big, calm eyes. They were used to the sudden frenzied
-retreats of the big stallion, but they never became as excited as he,
-except when rifles spat and men raced shouting upon them.
-
-After the rest spell the chestnut led the band down along a wooded
-ridge. He kept to deep cover so that an enemy posted on a peak or bare
-rim could not see the moving mares and colts. Toward midafternoon he
-halted the band in a little meadow to feed. The mares and colts began
-pulling the long grass eagerly. They were aware that the rest period
-might be short, and wanted to get their bellies filled as quickly as
-possible. They were right. The big stallion allowed time for but half a
-meal. He did not want them heavy and sleepy from overfeeding.
-
-They moved down the mountain toward the deep, blue slash which was
-Shadow Canyon. The chestnut halted at the edge of a wide meadow. His
-protruding eyes had sighted a little cabin at the upper end of the
-meadow. He was about to lead his band back into the spruce when he
-saw a black mare standing with head up and ears pricked forward. He
-heard the blast of a whistler sounding a general alarm, and his ears
-flattened. The whistlers always annoyed him. He liked to move through
-the woods unnoticed and unheralded. But he remained at the edge of the
-timber watching the black mare, his nostrils twitching eagerly.
-
-No one came out of the cabin. The stallion pawed and whinnied low. His
-call was answered by the black mare. There was eagerness in her whinny.
-The chestnut cast caution aside. Here was a sleek and slender mare he
-could add to his band. He trotted out into the meadow, neck arched, red
-mane floating in the wind.
-
-Lady Ebony stood for a moment looking at the chestnut stallion, then
-she arched her neck and kicked her heels high. With a toss of her head
-she trotted toward him. They met in the center of the meadow with
-the mares watching out of calm, uninterested eyes. The mares fell to
-feeding while the colts bucked and bounced.
-
-For a moment the noses of the two horses met, then the black mare
-whirled and lashed out at the stallion with her trim hoofs. He dodged
-and whinnied shrilly. Lady Ebony broke and ran down the meadow with
-the stallion thundering after her. He laid back his ears and charged
-with all his speed, but the flying black mare was faster. She pulled
-easily away from him and the sight of her slim body slipping away made
-the big stallion scream savagely. Never before had a mare been able to
-outrun him, to slip away from him with ease.
-
-Seeing that she was leaving the big fellow behind, Lady Ebony whirled
-and halted, her front feet on a little hummock of grass. She waited
-until he was almost upon her, then she dodged past him and raced toward
-the mares. Again she outran him easily.
-
-The chestnut was filled with a wild desire to drive this fleet mare
-into his band and lead her away. He swerved and charged. She dodged
-and leaped past him. Lady Ebony was not trying to escape, she was
-giving play to the pulsing life within her. The coming of the chestnut
-stallion was something she had expected. She had been restless and
-nervous; now that restlessness was gone and she was filled with surging
-energy.
-
-The chestnut raced around the meadow again, trying to overtake Lady
-Ebony. He finally halted and stood with heaving sides. There was a
-savage light in his protruding eyes. Lady Ebony trotted toward him
-and stood nickering softly. She wanted to run some more. But the big
-stallion knew he was beaten. He was aware that he had made a great deal
-of noise, and noise was likely to bring riders with rifles. He turned
-and began driving his band off the meadow.
-
-As they trotted toward the narrow trail leading down into Shadow
-Canyon, Lady Ebony tossed her head and trotted after the band. The big
-stallion lunged at her with bared teeth. She humped her back and jigged
-up and down, warning him that if he nipped her she would lash out at
-him. He reached out to snap at her flanks and was met by two small
-hoofs which smashed against his wide chest. With a snort he leaped
-aside. He did not lunge at her again. She was much to his liking, a
-fighter and a swift runner.
-
-Lady Ebony fell in with the mares and the band moved down into the
-deep, green twilight of the canyon. They kept going until they reached
-the bottom. There they paused, crowding to the edge of the river,
-thrusting their muzzles into the cold water foaming over the rocky bed.
-
-When the horses had drunk their fill they moved on down the canyon.
-Several miles of fast moving brought them to a high wall of red cliffs.
-Here Crazy River turned east and the canyon deepened. The chestnut sent
-the band up a trail which switchbacked and looped up out of the depths.
-With bared teeth and smashing hoofs he shoved the band up the trail and
-onto a mesa. Out on flat ground he let them rest. He was heading toward
-the desert where they would be free of attack from armed riders.
-
-The mares fed on the bunch grass which carpeted the mesa. They kept
-well together and jerked up their heads, whinnying to their colts when
-the little ones strayed. There was danger in each adventurous trip the
-colts made, for they had not yet learned to watch and to listen. This
-broken country was the natural home of the cougar. It was also the den
-area for the gray wolves. When the colts trotted too far, their mothers
-followed and herded them back.
-
-Above the mesa towered the snow peaks of the Crazy Kill Range. The
-snowbanks were not so close as they had been that morning, but seen
-through the high, thin air they seemed to be brooding no more than a
-short canter above the tableland. To the south, seen through a forest
-of trees and leaves much lighter green than the spruce, lay the desert,
-flat, eroded, purple in the evening light. The meadow was bordered
-on the lower side by an aspen grove. When the wind came up out of the
-canyon, the aspens seemed to shudder. A cross made of aspen wood had
-once been lifted on Calvary, so the preachers and the circuit rider
-said; possibly the aspens remembered. They quaked and their round
-leaves rattled and rustled like a million tiny cymbals. Below the aspen
-belt lay the scrub oaks, stunted trees with twigs as tough and hard as
-iron.
-
-The chestnut stallion felt safer here on the edge of the wild, high
-country. A short run would take his band into the scrub oaks where no
-rider could follow without dismounting.
-
-The sun dipped downward and hung on the blue rim of the western
-horizon. It looked like a huge ball of red fire. Slowly it settled
-from sight. Then shafts of red and gold light radiated upward, filling
-the sky and the air with a bloody haze. The wind died down and silence
-settled over the aspen grove. For a short space the world was aflame,
-then the sunset cooled and steel-blue dusk crept up out of the big
-canyon. The round moon, which had been dimmed to faint paleness by the
-sunset, flooded the mesa with soft light.
-
-The chestnut moved close to Lady Ebony. He nickered low. She tossed her
-head, and they were off on a wild gallop around the meadow. They ran
-through the moonlight, disregarding rocks and gopher holes, leaping
-over sage clumps and patches of buckbrush, their manes and tails
-billowing in the wind, their rushing bodies surging with power. They
-circled the meadow twice. Lady Ebony easily keeping ahead of the big
-stallion.
-
-After the second round, the black mare swerved and raced to a high,
-jutting point. Here she halted and the chestnut charged up beside her.
-He pawed and shook his head, then reared on his hind legs and his
-powerful forefeet curved under him. When his forefeet settled to the
-ground, Lady Ebony moved closer to him, her shoulder pressing against
-his muscled chest. The chestnut nickered proudly.
-
-From an aspen stand below the feeding mares leaped five shadowy gray
-forms. They ran with long leaps, their black muzzles lifting and
-falling with an even, graceful flow of motion. Red tongues lolled over
-white fangs and yellow eyes flamed in the moonlight. From shaggy chests
-came eager yelps. The chestnut blasted a shrill warning to the mares,
-but the wolves did not swerve to attack the colts. They raced across
-the mesa, running for the pure joy of giving play to their stringy
-muscles.
-
-At the lower edge of the meadow they startled an old doe who had come
-out of the aspens to feed. One of the gray killers turned in along the
-edge of the woods, the others fanned out and their eager yelps changed
-to a chorus of savage howls. The old lobo at their head had sounded the
-cry of the kill.
-
-The startled mule deer doubled her slim legs under her and bounded. She
-landed many yards down the slope, and bounded again. Her white rump
-patch flashed in the silvery light as she fled. Three of the wolves
-raced after her while two turned right and leaped away around the hill.
-The doe reached the edge of the mesa and bounded down the steep slope
-at a pace which rapidly outdistanced her pursuers. When they were out
-of sight she swerved and ran around the hill. She intended to return to
-her feed ground by doubling back, a trick used by both mule deer and
-big rabbits. She broke out on the mesa a little below where she had
-been feeding when the killers startled her. Behind her she could hear
-the faint yelping of the three following lobos. She suddenly planted
-her feet and tried to pivot so she could plunge back down the hill. Two
-savage, grinning killers had appeared, one a little above her and one
-a little below. They were cutting in on her as fast as they could leap
-over the brush and rocks.
-
-The doe whirled back down the slope, but before she had taken three
-jumps she was met by the three killers who had stayed on her trail.
-They were fanned out, running well apart. She slid to a halt and turned
-to run around the hill, but she was too late. The killers swarmed over
-her, the two attacking wolves leaping in at almost the same instant.
-She went down bleating and kicking.
-
-In a few minutes the night was filled with the snarling and growling of
-the feeding pack. Up on the ledge Lady Ebony crowded closer to the big
-stallion. He snorted defiantly and rubbed his head against hers.
-
-That night the wild horses stayed on the mesa. The next day Lady Ebony
-loped down into the desert, one of the wild band, a willing member of
-the chestnut stallion’s harem. They traveled at an easy lope which
-their tough bodies could hold for many hours. They halted in little
-meadows to feed and sought streams and water holes when they were
-thirsty.
-
-As they moved into the canyon-slotted, eroded world of the desert they
-left the clear streams behind, and had to depend upon the knowledge of
-the chestnut stallion or one of the old mares for the location of pools
-and springs. The grass was shorter, curly buffalo and gamma, growing in
-clumps that defied shifting sand and hot wind.
-
-The world changed quickly. The spruce, the aspens, and even the scrub
-oak vanished and in its place there was juniper--dry, defiant of the
-heat, sending its roots deep into the yellow earth, down cracks in the
-sand rock. The canyons were walled with red and yellow sandstone. The
-washes were bedded deep with sand instead of water, and the wind made
-the sand creep along, piling it into the dunes on the mesas, knifing it
-out in drifts from the ledges of rimrock. The days were hot and dry,
-but the nights were cool to the point of chillness.
-
-From sentinel buttes or rims they sometimes sighted copper-skinned
-Navajos riding always at a gallop, on lean, bony ponies. The Navajos
-were always hurrying, though they had no place to go and all eternity
-to get there in. Once Lady Ebony sighted a summer hogan with two Navajo
-women and four children sitting in the shade of a canopy of dry leaves
-and cottonwood branches. The women were patiently slipping colored
-thread across a loom, back and forth, back and forth, one thread above
-another. Below the hogan a sad-looking band of sheep and goats cropped
-at the short grass.
-
-The chestnut stallion snorted angrily when he smelled the grass where
-the sheep had been. He did not like sheep taint. He led the band far
-from the pasture lands of that Navajo family.
-
-
-
-
-3. Horse Thief
-
-
-Sam’s claim was not a gold strike or a bonanza. It was a pocket, very
-definite, and certainly limited in the amount of gravel and black sand
-which carried much fine and some coarse gold. Sam knew its extent and
-its possibilities. He had kept its location a careful secret. It was
-not legally staked, for in staking it he would have brought a swarm of
-gold seekers to the ridge, and he wanted this country to himself. He
-would take out enough to buy the black mare plus enough to buy supplies
-for the winter. When he finished there would still be gold left, a sort
-of bank account to be hoarded against the coming seasons.
-
-For three weeks Sam shoveled and panned. At last he had enough yellow
-dust in his buck-hide pouch. He carefully buried his shovel, pick, and
-pan under a pile of rocks, covered his workings, and faced down the
-ridge.
-
-As he trudged slowly through the fields of columbine and mountain
-lupine, he smiled softly to himself. The major would be completely
-flabbergasted. Sam laughed aloud, startling a cocky jay. The gaily
-dressed fellow fluffed his feathers and his purple crest bristled. He
-burst into a volley of angry chattering as he hopped about in a young
-balsam tree.
-
-“Got a right to ha-ha,” Sam said aloud. “The ol’ glory hole come
-through with five hunnert an’ some extra fer grub. Left me a bit fer
-seed, too.” He continued to chuckle as he tramped along.
-
-He trudged on until he could see his mesa through the red trunks of
-the spruce. Breaking out at the edge of the meadow he halted and
-stood looking over the familiar scene. Every detail was so familiar
-to him that he seemed to be entering a room where he had lived a long
-time. The old yellowbelly whistler sounded a blasting warning and
-plunged from his high perch. Ground squirrels romped to their dens.
-On the semibarren little hill the dogs began scolding, “squit-tuck!
-squit-tuck!” Sam grinned.
-
-“Yuh ol’ fool, don’t yuh go makin’ me out no enemy,” he said aloud.
-
-His eyes moved eagerly up and down the meadow, then he whistled a few
-high notes. There was no answering pound of hoofs. The black mare must
-be at the far end of the mesa.
-
-“Must be off cattin’ around,” he mumbled as he shuffled to his cabin
-door.
-
-Before Sam entered the cabin the old whistler discovered his mistake.
-He sounded an all-clear whistle and the meadow came to life. Sam
-dropped down on his old chair to watch the busy scene. After a time
-he got to his feet and pulled the latch thong. The door swung inward
-protestingly. Everything was as he had left it, except that a wandering
-cowboy had stopped and made himself a pot of tea and fried a snack of
-bacon. Sam knew, because the skillet was carefully washed and polished
-and the cracked teapot was washed and turned upside down on the table.
-
-Sam shuffled about the cabin peering at the familiar things within its
-walls. He finally built a fire. He was hungry for oven biscuits and
-stove-cooked coffee.
-
-He was poking the pine-knot fire to high heat when a voice from the
-open door made him turn. His faded eyes lighted up eagerly as he saw
-Major Howard standing there. The major had a grim set to his eyes and
-his mustache bristled angrily.
-
-“Come on out, Sam,” he said gruffly.
-
-“Howdy, major,” Sam said. He began to chuckle. Might as well spring
-the big surprise right away. Then he saw that there were two men with
-the major, men wearing nickel-plated stars on the flaps of their wool
-shirts. He blinked his eyes.
-
-“Howdy, sheriff,” he said. He barely knew Sheriff Miller, had met him
-only a couple of times.
-
-“Now, Sam,” the major broke in harshly, “come clean. What did you do
-with that Lady Ebony horse?”
-
-“Me?” Sam stared at the major.
-
-“Yes!” the major snapped. “You took an awful fancy to that filly,
-wanted to buy her. You’ve been away a long spell. I brought the sheriff
-up here, so you better talk and talk fast.” The major’s face was
-beginning to redden as his anger rose.
-
-Sam looked from one man to the other, slowly, his gaze searching their
-faces. Yes, they were in earnest. A horse thief? Bony fingers pulled
-at his straggling beard. This wasn’t the way men did, it wasn’t square
-shooting. He did not pause to consider that Major Howard was not a born
-western mountainman. He stared defiantly.
-
-“So yuh came up here to make me out a hoss thief?”
-
-The sheriff stepped forward and spoke gruffly to the major. “I’m not
-here, Howard, to help you badger this old coot. You swore out a warrant
-for his arrest. I’m here to serve it.” He turned to Sam. “Get whatever
-you want to take along. This warrant calls for your arrest--charge is
-stealing one black mare.”
-
-Sam blinked and his eyes shifted to the sheriff’s face. In all his
-life the law had never laid a hand on him. He had had some experiences
-of his own with horse thieves. When he caught a man with the goods he
-handled the affair himself. And claim jumpers were met and dealt with
-according to a man’s rights. He rubbed his bony fingers together. He
-could explain, he could even take the sheriff to his hidden claim, he
-could produce the pouch of dust. But it wasn’t the right of any man to
-ask where he had been or what he had been doing. Besides, the claim
-wasn’t staked and if fools who didn’t know pockets and glory holes
-saw that ground there’d be a rush and the whole ridge would be turned
-upside down. His eyes glinted brightly as he turned toward his door.
-
-He backed past the table and one hand lifted to the belt hanging from
-its willow peg. His gnarled fingers closed around the familiar butt of
-his forty-five Colt. The gun slid down and snuggled against his hip.
-Then he shuffled toward the door.
-
-“Get! Get--afore I blast yuh!” he whispered hoarsely as he stepped into
-the sunshine.
-
-The deputy saw the gun first. He came to life with a jerk and his hand
-shot down to his own gun. Sam shot from the hip. His aim wasn’t steady;
-the black muzzle wavered a little because Sam’s old eyes couldn’t see
-clearly. Black-powder smoke billowed in a blue-white cloud, filling the
-doorway. Through the smoke Sam saw the deputy double over, then pitch
-forward. He was swinging his gun around to bring it down on the major
-when the sheriff’s boot shot upward and sent it spinning from his hand.
-The officer’s voice out through the smoke.
-
-“Now you got something to answer for, you old coot!”
-
-He stepped forward and a heavy hand dropped upon Sam’s shoulder. He was
-jerked forward and in less than a minute his wrists were handcuffed
-together. He stood silently watching the sheriff and the major plug
-the deputy’s wound. The man was weak and sick, but he was alive.
-
-The major straightened and glared at Sam. He had never intended to have
-the old fellow jailed, he merely wanted to scare him into revealing
-what he had done with the black mare. Sam’s reaction irritated and
-puzzled him. Now the old fool could take whatever the law handed him;
-the major made up his mind to that.
-
-Sheriff Miller had a different slant on the affair. He was a
-mountainman himself. All his life he had dealt with cowhands and
-miners. He recognized that Sam was acting as most of them would act
-under the same conditions. He blamed himself because he had thought Sam
-too old to have any fire left.
-
-“I’m not too proud of this job,” he said sourly to the major.
-
-“You’d better do your duty,” the major snapped.
-
-The sheriff nodded his head. He turned to Sam.
-
-“Now get what you want. We’re going. I’ll go into the cabin with you
-just to make sure you don’t try anything else.”
-
-“I don’t reckon I need anything,” Sam answered.
-
-
-
-
-4. Desert Winter
-
-
-Life for the wild horses in the desert was a never-ending battle for
-food, for protection, and for the chance to slip through the gray
-dawn to a water hole where eager muzzles could be thrust into murky,
-yellow water. The chestnut stallion was a hard but wise leader. He
-knew that man controlled the best of the grazing lands, that mounted
-riders patrolled the foothills and the deep valleys back against the
-mountains. He had only savage disdain for the geldings and mares who
-submitted to man’s saddle and steel bit. No patriot ever cherished his
-freedom more than the chestnut stallion.
-
-In the desert there were Indian hunters to be watched for. The Navajo
-people were not like the whites in their way of life. They were
-wandering nomads, following their herds, never making a home in any
-permanent spot. In summer they built branch-covered shelters. In the
-winter they crowded into log and mud hogans. They were children of
-the wild, untamed desert, as cunning as the gray lobo. The Navajo had
-strange customs. Among them the women owned the sheep, the goats, the
-hogan and the children. The men owned the horses, and the hunting
-weapons, along with the turquoise jewelry they wore. Horses to a Navajo
-were the same as gold to a white man, they were his measure of wealth
-and standing. So the Navajo men stalked the wild bands, capturing colts
-and mares to add to their wealth.
-
-The Navajos knew every water hole in the desert. Like the tawny cougar
-and the savage lobo, they knew the wild bands must drink, that sooner
-or later they must slip down to the water hole. So they stalked them
-near the water holes and swarmed after them, riding in relays, keeping
-the band moving, keeping them from drinking or resting.
-
-The chestnut stud considered all these things in his own way and met
-the problems with sharp wits, keen eyes, and keener sense of smell,
-keeping a constant, alert watch for enemies. He kept his band in the
-broken country where mesas dropped away in sheer, steep slopes to the
-depths of the sand washes. From the top of such a mesa the band could
-easily thunder down into a canyon at a moment’s warning.
-
-Lady Ebony accepted the hard life. She liked the sudden, wild charges,
-the long runs under the white stars, the savage freedom which was so
-costly. When the chestnut stallion sounded the alarm she always led
-the rushing charge, flying ahead of the reaching, pounding hoofs of
-the mares and colts, slowing her speed to allow them to overtake her.
-The band foraged for grass at dawn or in the first grayness of dusk,
-coming out of a canyon to spread over the mesatop. Then as she pulled
-the scant grass she remembered the high mountain mesa where the grass
-grew knee-deep and cold, crystal streams rushed over gleaming rocks.
-She remembered the red and the yellow and the purple flowers, the solid
-masses of blue lupine, the flaming orange of acres of daisies.
-
-This silent, terrible land was in such sharp contrast to the mountain
-country that the chestnut’s desire for it seemed foolish to her. Fear
-of man grew but slowly within her. Man had always been her friend and
-protector. Sam with his lumps of sugar and his petting, Tex riding up
-in the fall with the rest of the major’s boys to take her down to the
-winter pastures. The savage anger of the big stallion when he smelled
-man scent, the mad charge down the rocky slopes, these were confusing
-to her, but she accepted them and began to snort and shake her head
-when the scent came to her.
-
-The desert was a mass of broken mesas, eroded hills, and deep-gutted
-canyons. There were many rivers, but no water. The eyes of the band
-could see far, but the scene was the same always. And yet this vast
-world was filled with a silence that was calm and restful. The desert
-was a canvas of shifting, changing color. Under the white-hot glare
-of the day the reds and yellows flamed. At dawn and at sunset it was
-purple and mauve and steel blue. And always to the north stood the
-shining mountains, etched blue against the sky, with the white snow
-line gleaming like a crown above the deep blue of the forests. Lady
-Ebony often stood and stared through the haze at the ragged outline of
-the Crazy Kill Range.
-
-Summer slipped past, and fall rains woke the short grass to life, a
-brief and hurried growth before the cold and the snow came. The wild
-ones cropped avidly, pulling the tender shoots from their crowns,
-tasting them eagerly before swallowing them. The chestnut stallion
-kept the band moving south, down off the higher benches to the deeper
-canyons where blizzards would not rage so fiercely.
-
-Indian summer slipped away and the purple mists lifted from the
-cathedral rocks and the spires of the ship rocks. The air cleared and
-the mornings were cold, with white frost covering the ground. The colts
-frisked and bucked and raced in little circles until the sun warmed
-their shaggy coats. Even the mares became spirited when the white
-frost was on them. Lady Ebony slipped into the slower, less wild way
-of the mares. She did not run except when the band took alarm, but she
-still ran at the head of the thundering herd.
-
-One day a wind came down out of the north. It carried fine snowflakes
-which swirled along the ground and curled upward on the lee side of
-rocks. Toward night the storm thickened until it became a driving
-blizzard riding a shrieking wind. The horses turned their tails to
-the lash of the storm and drifted slowly south, led by one of the old
-mares. That night they bunched close together in a deep canyon. They
-crowded under a projecting lip of sandstone where the wind and the snow
-did not strike them. Fine white particles sifted down, covering their
-shaggy coats and making them look like white horses as they stood with
-their heads down waiting for the blizzard to blow itself out.
-
-The shelter they had found had been formed centuries before by the
-action of wind and water on the layers of rock forming the crust of
-the desert. The upper layer was hard and did not weather away as fast
-as the lower layers. Thus a great, projecting roof was formed with a
-ceiling that sloped back under the cliff. A thousand years earlier,
-brown men had passed that way. They had halted in the bed of the canyon
-and looked up at the great cave. They had held a council and decided to
-build a city under the rim.
-
-Those brown cliff dwellers had built houses of hewn stone, room upon
-room, like apartments. Their masonry still stood, back under the rim.
-The ceremonial kivas built under the ground in circular form with laced
-log roofs had caved in but the tiers of houses stood against the cliff,
-their open windows staring into the canyon. The brown men had vanished,
-down into the canyon, south toward the plains, and west toward the
-great ocean, but their homes remained.
-
-The wild horses saw the houses piled story upon story, the staring
-windows and the heaps of broken pottery decorated with strange designs.
-They were not afraid of the dead houses because the man smell had long
-since vanished, carried away by the wind and the heat, toward the south
-and the west.
-
-At night an old lobo wolf halted his bachelor pack on a high rim above
-the ancient city. The wind lashed and tore at the gray bodies as though
-trying to tear them from the rocky cliff. The old lobo bared his fangs
-and lifted his muzzle. He sounded a savage paean of howls and high,
-dismal calls and his sons joined in the chorus. Their howls rang down
-the wind curling along the face of the cliff to where the wild horses
-stood. The mares jerked up their heads, and the big chestnut snorted
-savagely. But the howls of the pack had none of the savage cry of the
-kill. The gray ones were defying the storm, daring it to sweep them
-from their lofty crag. They were answering an age-old urge to challenge
-the elements, to dare them to do their worst. After a while the old
-lobo led his sons in a wild chase down the ridge. They leaped along,
-riding the fierce wind, snapping and snarling eagerly.
-
-For two days the wild band remained under the rim; then the blizzard
-broke and the sun struggled through the gray clouds to shine feebly
-into the canyon. The mares moved out and began pawing among the tumbled
-rocks, digging for grass. They scooped the new snow and swallowed it
-to wet their throats. Above them, against the turquoise sky, a pair
-of buzzards wheeled and circled, their round, hard eyes peering down
-hungrily, watching the horses, eager to see if any showed signs of
-weakness. The undertakers of the air would follow the band daily,
-hoping the cold and the scant feed would bring death to some of the
-band.
-
-The chestnut stallion met the rigors of winter with the same disdain
-he held for hunters. The colts were watched more closely because the
-snow and the cold had driven the natural food of the cougar and the
-wolves to cover. Many of the little dwellers were curled up in deep,
-warm burrows sleeping. Most of the birds had flown south. But the big
-killers did not sleep. Winter was a time when hunger and famine stalked
-their world, when they ran for days with lean, gaunt bellies driving
-them on. The hunger which cramped their stomachs made them savage and
-daring, it sharpened their cunning, and made their raids more deadly.
-
-One evening a hungry colt strayed from the band, seeking a spot where
-the snow was not so deep. His mother was busy pawing through a drift
-where she had located a clump of bushes with tender twigs in abundance.
-The colt wandered up to a stand of juniper which stood sprawled against
-the snow. He dug down experimentally, found no curly buffalo grass and
-moved on, farther up the slope, closer to the green trees.
-
-He was pawing into a drift when he heard a savage snarling. He jerked
-up his head and snorted, his round eyes staring with fright. Out of the
-juniper woods leaped four gray wolves. Their broad chests rose above
-the snow, spraying it aside in fine spurts. Their red tongues rolled
-between their bared fangs. The pack was lean and gaunt, but they did
-not sound the cry of the kill, they ran silently, emitting low snarls.
-
-The colt whirled and floundered toward the mares. The chestnut stallion
-was the first to see the wolves. With a squeal of rage he charged
-toward them. The colt plunged along but he had wandered far from the
-band. Behind him the killers rapidly closed in. Their white fangs
-slashed the muscles and tendons of his straining legs, hamstringing
-him. He went down plunging and kicking, and the gray killers leaped
-upon him ripping and tearing.
-
-At the sound of the chestnut’s shrill warning the mares jerked up their
-heads and charged to the rescue of the struggling colt. Lady Ebony
-leaped ahead close beside the big stallion. For a moment the wolves
-stood their ground, then they faded back, snarling and howling, to
-circle around the band. The mares milled and stamped around the colt
-while his mother nosed him and whinnied eagerly. He kicked a little,
-then lay still.
-
-In the sky above the buzzards shortened their circles and dropped.
-Their long wait had been rewarded. The mares kept a close guard around
-the carcass of the colt for a long time. The wolves sat on the snow and
-stared out of flaming yellow eyes, waiting with slaver-flecked jaws,
-sure they would feast in due time. They looked up at the buzzards now
-sweeping low above the snow and growled defiantly.
-
-The frantic mother kept nosing her colt, trying to get him to his feet
-so that she could lead him away from the blood smell and the wolf
-taint. The chestnut charged the wolves many times. They leaped away
-before his lashing hoofs, darting behind him, jumping at his legs and
-heels. And the buzzards settled down on the snow to wait.
-
-The mares guarded the dead colt for over an hour, then they moved
-away leaving the mother alone. She remained standing over the twisted
-carcass, whinnying nervously. Then the killers leaped in and circled
-around her, darting toward her, two behind and two in front. She lashed
-at them, pivoted, kicked wildly, her pounding hoofs striking nothing.
-The chestnut stallion came to her rescue and drove the wolves away,
-then he drove her down the slope to where the band was feeding. She
-went slowly, halting to stand with her head up and nicker softly. The
-wolves leaped on the carcass and began devouring it while the buzzards
-walked over the snow, halting with their necks stretched out, their
-hard eyes glittering. They must wait for their share, which would be
-the gnawed bones.
-
-And so the battle against the snow and the cold went on through the
-long winter. Another colt was lost to the gray killers, and an old
-mare went lame. She dropped behind in spite of the savage nipping and
-crowding of the big stallion. That night she bedded down alone in a
-little canyon and a gaunt cougar came upon her in the gray dawn. Her
-end came swiftly, without a struggle.
-
-Then spring came with rushing torrents, slush in the arroyos, and
-slick, yellow mud on the hillsides. Streams boiled out of the dry
-canyons thick with raw clay and sand. This was the season when nature
-carved deeply into the face of the desert. Only the sand washes and the
-dunes on the flats resisted the water. The sand ate it up and packed
-hard so that it did not cling and drag when the band galloped over it.
-
-With the speed of a miracle the desert bloomed. The sage flats flared
-white with the blossoms of the primrose and the mariposa lily.
-Countless other stunted plants put forth flowers, eager to create and
-ripen seed before the heat and drought of summer came. And the grass
-shot out of the ground, rich and sweet. The band cropped and moved on,
-ever searching for taller grass.
-
-The mares were lean and gaunt, their ribs pushing ridges up under
-their shedding coats. The chestnut stallion was lean, too, but in a
-hard-muscled way. Lady Ebony had lost much of her fire and love for
-frolic. The sun was warm and the air soft but she needed rest. She
-looked away toward the white slopes of the Crazy Kill Range. Spring
-would not reach the high mesa for another month, but she was restless.
-She would have headed away into the foothills but the big stallion kept
-close watch over his band.
-
-One day a horseman rode out on a rim. He sat on his bony horse and
-looked down on the wild band feeding on a bench. For a long time he sat
-there looking intently before he rode away. Yellow Man smiled as he
-galloped toward his hogan. There were many good colts in the band and
-one black mare. The black mare was a horse such as he had never seen
-before, the sort of mount he had always dreamed about. He would tell
-the other men about the band, but the black mare was to be his because
-he had been the first to see her.
-
-He rode to his hogan and picketed his pony. Walking to the glowing fire
-which flickered inside the door he stooped and held out his hands. Four
-men sat along one wall while a half dozen brown-faced women sat on the
-other side. On the men’s side of the hogan lay riding things, bridles
-and blankets, a saddle. On the women’s side were the cooking pots and
-the blankets. Yellow Man sat down. For a long time he said nothing. His
-black eyes were on the fire.
-
-Finally Yellow Man lifted his eyes to the face of an old man beside him.
-
-“I have seen many good horses,” he said.
-
-The old man grunted softly while the others bent forward.
-
-“There is a black mare who will have a colt this spring,” Yellow Man
-said.
-
-They all nodded. The black mare was to belong to Yellow Man, that was
-understood. Now they waited for him to go on.
-
-“Tomorrow we will run the band. There will be horses for all. The big
-one who leads may have to be shot. I will take the rifle. The big one
-is strong and will fight.” Yellow Man’s eyes returned to the fire.
-
-The others nodded and began eagerly planning the drive. Through the
-long winter they had kept busy with sings and chants, meeting with
-other families in religious dances and ceremonies. This would be the
-first hunt of the season.
-
- * * * * *
-
-To the north, behind the high gray walls of the state prison Sam knew
-when spring came. Through a high, barred window he could see a square
-of sunlight on the stone wall. Across the upper corner of the square
-drooped the branches of a cottonwood tree. Sam watched the buds swell
-and burst into pale-green leaves.
-
-The warden and the guards shook their heads when they walked past his
-cell. Eight years. The old fellow would be lucky to finish two of them.
-He refused to work outside, he hated even to exercise in the closed-in
-yard. He wanted to be left alone, to sit and stare out the little
-window. But Sam did not share their belief that he would never leave
-the gray walls. He was sure he would return to the high mesa. He wasn’t
-going to die cooped up in a gloomy cell; when he died it would be out
-in the open with his boots on, under a mountain sky.
-
-He did not brood over his trial. His attorney had been irritated to the
-point of anger when Sam refused to tell where he had been and what he
-was doing during the three weeks of absence from his cabin. That was
-his business; he’d need his cache when he got out. Nobody was going
-to find out about it. His stubbornness had convinced the jury of his
-guilt. Sam had paid the attorney well though the judge had offered to
-let the state pay the fee. He didn’t think much about those things, he
-just sat and stared at the cottonwood branch.
-
-Tex, Major Howard’s foreman, had talked to him. Tex understood better
-than any of the others, but Sam wasn’t trusting anybody. He had learned
-from years of battling for gold that the yellow metal was poison to
-friendship and trust. Tex was a right fine feller, but there was no
-call to push him too far.
-
-
-
-
-5. Wild Horse Drive
-
-
-The snow had vanished and the desert was dry and thirsty again. Dust
-spurted up around the hoofs of the wild horses as they loped down a
-long ridge. The east was beginning to show a pale flush of red and day
-came quickly to the barren country, lighting the tall spires and castle
-rocks and the sharp points of the pinnacles, making the monument valley
-below appear alive.
-
-The chestnut stallion swung along behind the mares. At their head ran
-an old roan. She was trailwise and wary. Her nose was leading her
-unerringly to a big water hole at the base of a cliff. The others
-pounded along behind her with the colts frisking beside their mothers.
-The chestnut halted every little while to whirl and sniff the morning
-air. He held his head high and his protruding eyes rolled as he stared
-back over the broken country they had left behind.
-
-The roan trotted off the ridge and down through a jumble of rocks to
-the base of a cliff. The horses nickered softly as they smelled water.
-The roan’s muzzle was a scant foot from the yellow surface of the
-pool when wild yells shattered the morning calm. The band whirled and
-stood with heads up, staring toward a rocky slope. Above them the big
-chestnut screamed a warning and an order to charge away.
-
-Down the slope toward the water hole galloped four riders. Their naked
-bodies gleamed copper-red in the new sunlight as they bent low over the
-necks of their lean ponies. With squeals of fright the band whirled
-and charged down the canyon. A cloud of yellow dust billowed at their
-heels. The chestnut stallion crashed down on their flanks with bared
-teeth and pounding hoofs. When a mare lagged he drove her squealing
-into the band. The mad charge carried the wild horses away from the
-four pursuing Navajos, but the trailers did not give up the chase.
-
-Back of the dust cloud Yellow Man rode beside his three sons. Their
-faces were expressionless; only their black eyes showed the eager
-excitement that filled them. They did not try to make their gaunt
-ponies overtake the thundering band but were content to keep a steady
-pace. The trail left by the wild horses was broad and easy to follow.
-
-Lady Ebony ran ahead of the band, keeping well out in front without
-effort. She was not badly frightened and the wild panic of the other
-horses had not gripped her. But she raced along just the same, enjoying
-the surging flight which gave full play to her powerful muscles. The
-big chestnut charged in and turned the band up the ridge. As they swept
-over the top of the rocky hill they saw the Indians galloping along the
-canyon bed below.
-
-Yellow Man shifted his seat on the bare back of his pinto. His black
-eyes were following the flight of the black mare, and there was a
-fierce eagerness in them. The chestnut leader was doing just what he
-wanted him to do. The big fellow was swinging his band into a wide
-circle, a curve which would carry them back into the country they had
-just left.
-
-The band thundered down off the ridge and headed up a sand wash.
-The drag of the sand and the uphill going slowed them but they kept
-pounding along, the stallion saw to that. He stayed behind and used his
-teeth savagely on the rumps of the laggards.
-
-Yellow Man and his sons galloped up the ridge and dropped into the sand
-wash. A thin smile parted the lips of the tall hunter as he noticed how
-fagged his horse was. They were chasing no ordinary wild scrub ponies.
-The chestnut stallion had trained his band well and kept them in fine
-condition. They had run the legs right out from under the Navajo
-ponies. He urged his pinto up the sand wash as fast as the little beast
-could travel.
-
-The chestnut saw the riders coming and noticed that they were working
-their way to the side as though aiming to come up alongside. He
-suspected a trick though he was disdainful of the slow-running ponies
-coming up from below. He changed his course a little to the north.
-Now the pursuers would have to travel much farther than his band to
-overtake them. The Navajo riders swung north too, and kept following
-close to the dust cloud.
-
-The chase thus took a circular course with the chestnut keeping the
-mares moving as fast as the colts could follow. But now the horses’
-sides were heaving, sweat was streaking their flanks and caking
-in lather-matted ridges above the hair. The big stallion snorted
-triumphantly as they topped a ridge. They had run away from their
-pursuers. The Indians were plodding along far behind. He allowed the
-mares to slow their pace to a lope while he galloped to right and then
-to left, looking down into washes and canyons for a hiding place.
-
-Suddenly the mares heard yells from their right. They saw five
-red-bronze riders charging down on them from a cover of junipers.
-Mounted on fresh horses, these braves came swiftly from their ambush.
-The chestnut stallion rushed on his band and sent them racing down
-into a canyon. The retreat led over a ledge and down a rocky hill. The
-slope was steep and covered with loose stones, but the sure-footed
-horses took the broken ground at a mad rush. One of the mares slipped
-and went down, rolling over and over, until she was stopped by a big
-boulder. She struggled to her feet and staggered around the hill. Her
-colt bounded after her nickering wildly.
-
-The charge of the hunters carried them close on the heels of the flying
-band. When the mare went down, two of the hunters swerved and followed
-her. The chestnut let her go and gave his attention to speeding the
-rest of the band. In a few seconds the speed of the wild horses carried
-them ahead of the Navajos’ lean ponies. But the three hunters following
-the mares kept yelling and galloping.
-
-The two hunters who had swerved to follow the crippled mare and her
-colt soon overtook them. They paid no attention to the mare but charged
-down on the colt. One of them swung a rope. The loop sailed out and
-dropped over the straining neck of the little fellow. The colt fought
-and kicked, but the Navajo boy knew how to handle a fighter. He kept
-his rope tight, almost to the choking point, and let the little horse
-wear himself out. In a short time he had mastered the colt and was
-heading toward camp with him. His companion galloped away to overtake
-the band.
-
-The chestnut stallion could not understand the attack of the Navajos.
-They did not start shooting when they got in close and they did not try
-to rope any of the mares. They just kept riding on the heels of his
-fast-tiring band, yelling and waving their arms. They were not like the
-wolf or the cougar, they did not strike when they got close, but they
-never left the heels of the herd. The big stallion shifted his course
-and again they began moving in a wide circle.
-
-This time the chestnut widened the circle, cutting back into the steep
-hill country, turning up crooked washes, crossing ridges, and doubling
-back occasionally. The Navajos stayed on the trail, keeping as close
-to the band as they could, cutting across when they sighted the mares
-doubling on their course. And now they were hanging close on the heels
-of the wild ones. Twice the chestnut stallion whirled and faced the
-hunters as though about to challenge them to a fight. The braves slid
-their hands down to where their guns hung about their naked waists.
-They did not wish to kill the big stallion unless he charged their
-ponies, nor did they care to try taming him. They wanted the black mare
-and the colts.
-
-The chestnut did not charge his tormentors. Fear of man and man’s
-far-killing gun sent him back to biting and shoving the mares into
-faster flight. He could not use the tactics which always succeeded
-against the wolf or the bear.
-
-Topping another ridge, he headed his band into a deep canyon. He knew
-they were almost winded from running uphill. The steep slope would help
-them to recover. One of the Navajos shouted:
-
-“He is doubling back! Head him!”
-
-The Indians sent their ponies charging recklessly down the dangerous
-slope, leaping over boulders and water-gutted ditches. But the band
-would not be headed. Going downhill had eased them and given them new
-life. They plunged along with sides heaving and nostrils flaring. Lady
-Ebony led them, keeping her pace down to their speed.
-
-One of the hunters headed his pony up out of the canyon. He halted on
-a jutting rock and sat looking down over the desert. His black eyes
-watched the fine spirals of yellow dust rising from the canyon and
-he nodded his head. The scattered groups of hunters would be able to
-locate the new direction the band had taken.
-
-The sharp eyes of three hunters hiding in a juniper grove on the rim
-of the canyon saw the spirals of dust rising from the dry watercourse
-above. They slipped across and waited.
-
-The chestnut began to breathe easier. Once again the band had
-outdistanced their pursuers and no raiders could be seen. But he was
-nervous and determined to keep the mares moving until they were deep in
-the rough, canyon-slotted country to the south. The weary horses slowed
-their pace to a trot. They were suffering for water and their hard
-muscles were crying for rest. They were used to sudden, wild charges
-when they would race at top speed for a while, but they were not used
-to a steady grind, hour after hour.
-
-Several of the mares began weaving away from the herd, sniffing for
-water, looking for a spot where they could halt and rest. Suddenly the
-yells they had come to dread broke the silence and echoed along the
-canyon walls. Three riders came charging toward them from below. The
-chestnut screamed a warning. For a moment he hesitated. There was an
-enemy pack behind them, and now one faced them. With a snort and a toss
-of his head he sent the band up the far slope out of the canyon. The
-hunters raced whooping and yelling after the mares.
-
-Escape from the canyon did not bring freedom from the worrying red
-riders. The desert seemed full of them. After every run, when the big
-stallion thought he had slipped away from his pursuers, a new and fresh
-band would charge from cover on the jaded mares. In desperation the big
-horse headed down a deep canyon. The mares could not travel uphill any
-more. They could not move fast but the hunters did not seem anxious
-to close in and strike. They kept on the heels of the wild ones. Now
-there were a dozen of them and they kept up a savage yelling as they
-stayed close to the band.
-
-Up ahead Lady Ebony began to tire. She was not driven by frantic
-fear and she was eager to stop and rest. At first she had enjoyed
-the flight, but now she was thirsty and her sides were heaving. She
-galloped ahead, leaving the band behind. As she raced along she saw a
-side canyon. Its floor was solid rock, worn smooth by wind and water.
-She slipped into the narrow opening and halted behind a shoulder of
-rock. She lowered her head and stood blowing hard. She had left no
-tracks on the rocky floor.
-
-The wild horses galloped past the mouth of the side canyon. A great
-cloud of dust rolled up after them. Lady Ebony heard the Navajos go
-whooping past. She stood listening until the pounding of hoofs and the
-yelling died away. Shaking her head, she trotted up the narrow canyon.
-She craved water and she wanted to be alone, to lie down and rest. She
-headed north because to the north lay the tall-grass meadows with clear
-streams bubbling across them. She moved along steadily, keeping to the
-bottom of the canyon where she was hidden from sight of any black-eyed
-hunter who might be sitting on a rim high above.
-
-A black rain cloud billowed up above the rims to the north. It rolled
-down across the desert on the wings of a driving wind which raised
-clouds of dust and sand. At dusk it swept over the canyon where Lady
-Ebony was marching along steadily north. It drenched her and gave her
-needed drinking water, then it moved on down to where the chestnut was
-making his last stand.
-
-In the canyon the big stallion had settled down to the grim job of
-lashing his mares into movement. They were not able to go fast but he
-kept them pounding along, just ahead of the yelling hunters. Their
-gaunt bellies were drawn and their dry nostrils flared red inside
-their dust-caked rims. The Navajos were shouting to one another, their
-spirits high. They were sure of their catch now and eager to close in
-as soon as the mares quit.
-
-Then the dusk of evening came and with it the downpour of rain. Nowhere
-in the world outside the tropics can so much water fall in so short a
-time as in the desert. The storm was bad luck for the hunters, but it
-spelled escape for the wild horses. It blotted out everything, bringing
-sudden, inky night. Its rushing, swirling waters wiped out the tracks
-of the horses. The chestnut stallion played wise. He took a side
-canyon, forcing his charges out on a rocky ridge. From that canyon they
-crossed another ridge and turned north. The big stallion was headed out
-of the desert.
-
-The hunters spread out and worked up and down the canyon but the
-darkness and rain defeated them. They finally gave up and turned their
-ponies toward their camp.
-
-All that night Lady Ebony kept moving. The storm passed and the moon
-came out with stars beyond it, stars that hung low over the barren
-country, brilliant with red and blue lights winking outside white
-centers.
-
-A pair of gray wolves flashed past like shadows. They leaped along,
-side by side, shoulder to shoulder. One was a big, broad-chested fellow
-with a wide muzzle and frost-cropped ears. The other was a slim gray
-one with slender legs and body. They paid no attention to Lady Ebony.
-They were not hunting, they were running, answering the call of spring,
-heading for a trysting place on a barren ridge.
-
-Lady Ebony heard them holding their spring concert on a high knoll.
-They howled and snarled and yelped. There was much yearning, much that
-sounded like deep laughter in their song, and there was tenderness in
-the notes of the slim gray one. In their mating time they had lost the
-savagery of winter. There was no specter of famine in the springtime,
-no blasting blizzards, no deep snow. There was food and there was an
-urge to find a snug den.
-
-Something of the feelings expressed by the gray wolves filled Lady
-Ebony. Just before dawn she halted and began feeding. She fed on
-through the morning. She saw no other horses and heard no savage yells.
-At midday she lay down and rested until late afternoon.
-
-When she moved on she headed north, toward the snowy ramparts of the
-Crazy Kill Range, and she went at a long, ground-devouring lope. That
-night she halted at a spring in the lower foothills. Berrybushes and
-willow grew around the spring and there was tall grass. Lady Ebony
-pulled the juicy grass contentedly. She was glad to be away from the
-teeth and smashing hoofs of the chestnut stallion. She did not miss the
-herd at all.
-
-The spring was so much of a change after the parched desert that she
-bedded down close beside it and rested until morning. With the gray
-dawn she was up and feeding on the lush grass. For several hours she
-fed, then she drank deeply and faced northward. Again she set her pace
-at a fast lope.
-
-
-
-
-6. Midnight
-
-
-Lady Ebony held her course until late afternoon. She was high in the
-red foothills when she halted. A little stream bubbled over red rocks,
-willow grew along the banks, and the grass was green. On each side of
-the water red rocks rose high against the sky. Along the base of the
-cliffs lay great slabs and piles of stone, broken loose from the walls
-by wind and rain, piled in confusion over the floor of the wild gorge.
-Lady Ebony moved among the tumbled rocks. A bobcat bounded from a
-thicket of rose brier where he had been hunting cottontails. Lady Ebony
-snorted and shook her head.
-
-She kept moving slowly along the stream until she came to a grove of
-cottonwoods. Close beside the grove grew a dense thicket of tangled
-brush. Lady Ebony dropped her head and began pulling the tender gamma
-grass. She did not look up at the Crazy Kill Range again. After she had
-eaten her fill she drank at the stream and lay down.
-
-Sunset flamed across the sky and died into cool shadows. The red bluffs
-changed from deep purple to slate gray. By almost unnoticeable degrees
-the moon brightened and flooded the valley and the cliffs changed color
-to match the white light. Now they were silvery with bands and squares
-of black shadows across them. And the stars hung, big and white, close
-to the ragged tops of the rims.
-
-In this garden of red rocks close beside the little stream a colt was
-born. The morning sun beating down on the floor of the gorge shone on a
-wobbly little horse crowding close to Lady Ebony’s side.
-
-The black colt jerked his curly tail and butted his head against his
-mother’s side as he got his first breakfast. His legs were long and
-heavy-boned. They were wobbly legs but they showed promise of great
-strength. His head was finely molded like his mother’s, and his sleek
-coat was all black, except for a white star in his forehead. That white
-star and the heavy-boned frame were his inheritance from his father,
-the chestnut stallion.
-
-Lady Ebony was proud and excited over her handsome jet-black colt--so
-black that he could well be called Midnight. She kept turning her head,
-nosing his silky rump, and nickering softly. She was suddenly aware
-of many things she had scarcely noticed before. She heard a rustling
-in the thicket and sniffed the warm air nervously. A faint odor of
-cat came to her and she snorted angrily. A few minutes later a big
-bobcat stepped out of the thicket and stood looking at her. Lady Ebony
-shook her head and stamped her feet. The bobcat opened his mouth wide,
-exposing rows of white teeth and a red tongue. He closed his mouth and
-his yellow eyes stared at the mare and her colt. Then he humped his
-sleek back and trotted through the sunshine across the meadow to where
-his mate was waiting for him.
-
-In one of the big cottonwoods a flicker hammered away at the trunk of
-the tree. Even this steady rat-a-tat bothered Lady Ebony. And when the
-flicker’s mate sailed down from the sky and alighted on an anthill she
-snorted again. The flicker up in the tree deserted his morning task
-and came down to join his wife in an ant hunt. They danced and cavorted
-on the anthill, picking up the busy little workers as they swarmed out
-to repel the invasion.
-
-A yellowbelly whistler came down out of the rocks and set to feeding,
-sliding along the ground, sitting up to stare intently across the
-meadow, chuckling to himself as he munched the roots he dug up. He was
-joined by a pair of cottontail rabbits who stayed close to cover as
-they fed.
-
-Midnight finished his breakfast and began walking around on his wobbly
-legs, investigating everything he came to with an inquisitive, pink
-nose. Lady Ebony followed him nickering nervously. The little fellow
-halted beside a clump of rattleweed. His ears pricked forward and he
-listened. From the deep shade under the green leaves came a warning
-rattle. The buzzing sound was repeated as Midnight’s nose drew closer.
-Lady Ebony sprang forward and stamped upon the patch of weeds as she
-shouldered her son away from the danger spot. The colt had met his
-first enemy, a big rattler.
-
-Lady Ebony showed by her actions that she considered Midnight an
-important little horse. She followed his wobbling course down the
-stream, then back again. After that he tried to run but his legs
-doubled under him and his body failed to do what he wanted of it.
-Finally he trotted out into the warm sun and lay down. In a few minutes
-he was sound asleep.
-
-Lady Ebony stood over him for a long time with her head down. Finally
-she set to cropping grass near where he slept. She knew that she must
-be constantly alert, ready to repel attack from killers that had never
-bothered her before. The morning serenade of a pair of coyotes above
-the rock garden made her nervous. Their mad chorus of yelping laughter
-and high, mournful notes caused her to move close to Midnight and stand
-there with head erect. The song dogs of the dawn finished their chorus
-and raced away across the meadow above.
-
-A great bald eagle wheeled above the tops of the red cliffs, his
-round, glassy eyes staring down on the meadow, his wings beating
-the air with powerful strokes. He saw the mare and her colt and his
-powerful beak clicked several times. His pinions stiffened and were
-held as rigid as the wings of a pursuit plane as he banked sharply and
-spiraled downward. He saw the black colt get to his feet and wander
-away from his mother. With a piercing scream he shortened his circles.
-His cry was answered from the deep blue above and a second eagle came
-plummeting down on folded wings, her body roaring through the thin air
-as she dived. She flattened her terrific plunge just above the red rock
-garden and circled with her mate.
-
-Lady Ebony jerked up her head and trotted to her son. She tried to
-stand over him but he did not wish to be bothered at the moment. He had
-discovered his own shadow and was making a great show of challenging
-the flat, black thing following him on the ground. He tossed his head
-and laid back his ears, his furry rump bumping up and down a little as
-he threatened to kick at his mother.
-
-The eagles soared and dived over the mare and her colt. The kings
-of the air were savage killers without fear of any ground dweller.
-They had struck down fawns and lambs and they knew they could smash
-the wobbly colt if his mother left an opening. Midnight became more
-irritated at his mother’s close guard. He tried to lash out at her with
-his hind feet. Lady Ebony let him trot away from her. He halted and
-snorted at his shadow.
-
-The king of the air saw his opening and dived. His wings were folded
-tight against his sides and he dropped like a bolt of lightning. Close
-behind him came his mate. The attack was so swift that Lady Ebony could
-not reach the side of her son in time to shield him. The diving eagle
-spread his wings a few feet above the back of the colt. His heavy
-breastbone struck Midnight a smashing blow while his long talons raked
-deep into the tender back of the little horse. Midnight went down so
-quickly the she-eagle missed him entirely. The blow which had felled
-him was the same smashing stroke with which the eagle broke limbs from
-trees when building a nest. It was his stroke of death, but he had not
-gauged it as well as he had intended. The breastbone struck Midnight
-across the hips and not in the middle of the back where it would have
-broken him down.
-
-With frantic snorts and eager whinnying Lady Ebony nosed her son as he
-staggered to his feet. He crowded close against her, willing now to be
-guarded. The eagles rose straight up into the blue for five hundred
-feet before they leveled off. They circled and looked down, their
-screams ringing along the cliffs. Midnight stayed close to his mother.
-His rump was smarting and he felt the need of her strength. After a
-time the eagles widened their circles and flew away.
-
-Midnight had learned another lesson. When Lady Ebony sounded a warning
-call he rushed to her side instead of humping his back and dancing up
-and down. He wanted no more raking talons in his skin. He was beginning
-to know the price of life in the wild. He was coming to know that the
-strong live while the weak and the foolish die soon.
-
-But the little horse’s fright passed quickly. He was a true child
-of the wilderness and fear was a passing shadow. With the circling
-killers gone from the sky he forgot them and sought dinner. He was much
-stronger now, his legs had stiffened and he was able to bounce up and
-down. The blood of his father gave him something Lady Ebony did not
-have, a vitality and a savageness all babies of the wild must have
-to survive. Had he been born with the band he would have been able to
-follow them. He made a short circle among the rocks, then came back to
-his mother’s side where he thrust his head under her flank and began
-drinking lustily. Lady Ebony was proud of him, but she was worried too,
-because there were so many enemies in this wild country. She was a
-horse trained to depend upon man, his fences and his protecting rifle.
-Vaguely she knew she should be in a shed during this important time.
-Midnight shared none of her worries; he was typically a wild horse.
-
-That evening the big bobcat serenaded them from the blue-black depths
-of the cottonwood grove. No man or beast who has ever heard the
-terrifying yowling of the cat-of-the-mountain when he is struck by a
-lonely mood has remained calm and unfrightened. Even the cougar and
-the wolf move off when he starts serenading. The big cat began his
-plaint with long “me-ows” till after a few minutes his cry was a series
-of “row-row-rows,” ending in terrific screeches. The weird screaming
-echoed along the rock walls of the gorge. It finally tapered off into
-long-drawn wails filled with hopeless despair as though the big fellow
-was condemned to a terrible fate and knew his time was near.
-
-Lady Ebony rushed to the side of Midnight and began frantically herding
-him up the canyon. She did not have to urge the little horse. He struck
-out wildly, running as fast as he could, looking back in terror,
-expecting to see a monster leap on him from the woods.
-
-A pair of coyotes trotting up the canyon halted and stood for a moment
-staring through the moonlight. They whirled and raced back, casting
-glances over their shoulders as they ran.
-
-After a time the big pussy with the bobtail walked out of the grove and
-seated himself on a rock. Whatever had been troubling him seemed to
-have been chased away by his vocal efforts. He yawned and stretched his
-lithe body leisurely, then looked around with a satisfied smirk. He had
-the canyon to himself and seemed highly pleased.
-
-He was a male weighing perhaps twenty-five pounds. His ears had black
-tufts at the ends, his lips were white with whiskers springing from
-black spots. In this he favored the lynx cat. But his eye rings were
-white and his reddish-brown body was marked with cloudings suggesting
-spots while his feet were small like those of a house cat. His tail
-was not more than seven inches long, a stubby bobbed-off tail, but it
-jerked nervously as he sat smiling over his kingdom of rock piles and
-tall grass. He was not hungry and the hunting mood did not fill him. He
-had feasted well on wood rat and rabbit earlier that evening. He had
-simply wished to clear all neighbors from his presence. Now that he had
-done it he sat and smirked on the top of his big rock.
-
-But the big cat did not reckon with one hunter who was not impressed
-by his terrible song. A big, snowy owl came beating along the canyon
-wall. His dim shadow floated across the grass toward the rock where
-the cat was sitting. The owl had not feasted that evening. Fate had
-been unkind. Every rabbit pasture he had swept over had already been
-raided by coyotes or cats. The old owl was never choice about his prey.
-His way was to strike at any living thing that came under his powerful
-beak and talons. He saw the shadow on the rock move. The animal sitting
-there was not bigger than many he had killed before. With a scream he
-dived.
-
-His smashing body struck the surprised cat on the neck and back. Long
-talons sank deep into the stringy muscles while powerful wings battered
-the sleek sides, knocking him off his perch and rolling him over.
-Instantly the sleepy fellow was changed to a hissing, spitting demon.
-He twisted his body and with claws and teeth lashed back at the ripping
-beak and beating wings of the owl. The owl drove his fangs deeper and
-tore at his snarling victim with his hooked beak.
-
-The bobcat’s fangs found the neck of the owl and sank into it with
-crunching swiftness. Blood spattered and fur and feathers filled the
-air. The battlers clung to their death holds and exerted all their
-strength. The bobcat’s raking hind feet ripped feathers out of his
-assailant and found the stringy flesh beneath them; his fangs sank
-deeper. Over and over they rolled, the owl flapping and clicking his
-beak savagely, the cat hissing and snarling and yowling.
-
-Both fighters weakened quickly because their wounds were deep and
-driven into vital parts. They tumbled into a hollow between two big
-rocks. There they struggled feebly for a time. Finally they lay still,
-the crumpled and tangled body of the owl under that of the cat, his
-big, round eyes staring savagely up at the stars. The bobcat lay with
-fangs driven into the neck of his antagonist, his yellow eyes closed to
-slits, his sleek coat marred by tufts of torn hair.
-
-A little wind stirred down the canyon. It passed over the hollow where
-the dead animals lay, it seemed to spread the news that two deadly
-hunters had passed out of the red rock garden. The bunnies crept out
-to the edge of their thicket homes and the wood mice and rats ventured
-into the tall grass. After the way of the wild they started feeding
-peacefully.
-
-Lady Ebony and Midnight halted in the middle of a meadow a mile above
-the spot where the battle had taken place. Midnight, true to his wild
-instinct, had already forgotten the fear that had sent him charging out
-of the garden below. He saw a doe and a fawn feeding at the edge of
-the meadow and started over to make friends with them. Lady Ebony did
-not forget so quickly. She was nervous and excited all that night and
-tried to keep her son from walking up to the doe.
-
-Midnight approached the mule deer and her fawn. He nickered softly and
-humped his back, doing a little dance to show off before them. The doe
-snorted and shook her head. She was not afraid of a colt but she would
-take no chances with her baby. She turned about and led the little one
-back into the brush.
-
-Lady Ebony stayed in the upper meadow. She wanted to give her son time
-to get his legs under him before moving on. By the third day the colt
-was able to race around the meadow. He noticed the brightly colored
-flowers, and made a great show of fear when a rabbit hopped away before
-one of his charges. He was inquisitive and shoved his pink muzzle
-close to everything that interested him. That day he met one of the
-wilderness dwellers who lived in a burrow under a dead stump. Midnight
-was dancing about pretending to be frightened by a pair of rockchips
-who sat on a stone scolding and chattering because he had disturbed
-them. The stranger walked out of a brier thicket and marched down a
-deer trail.
-
-He was sleek and black except for broad stripes of white running down
-his back. His tail was a handsome plume of drooping hair, his snout
-was pointed, and his little eyes stared out on the world like black
-buttons sewed on his face. This stranger showed little interest in his
-surroundings. His dull mind held but one thought. Hunting for mice and
-bugs had been poor in the thicket near his burrow; he was crossing the
-meadow to another thicket. He had no fear of other animals. He claimed
-the right of way on every trail and not even a grizzly bear would have
-contested that right.
-
-Midnight stared at the striped brother, then shook his head and stamped
-his feet. He expected the big skunk to scamper for cover, then he would
-chase him. When the striped one paid no attention to him Midnight
-advanced a little closer. Perhaps this dull-sighted fellow was a little
-deaf. He danced and stamped his feet some more as he extended his nose
-toward the skunk. The skunk marched on, ignoring the little horse.
-Midnight stamped close to the striped fellow; the skunk’s plume lifted
-with a jerk as dirt and rocks showered over him from the colt’s hoofs.
-Any other wild creature would have fled from that danger signal. To
-Midnight this seemed a friendly gesture. He whinnied eagerly and thrust
-his nose closer to the striped one. The plume jerked twice as the skunk
-halted in the trail.
-
-Lady Ebony saw the skunk. She whinnied a loud warning. Midnight
-jerked up his head and looked around. He expected to see an enemy
-descending from the air or rushing out of the woods. His action saved
-him considerable pain and surprise. A greenish flare of musk shot by,
-close under his nose. Reeking fumes rolled around him. Midnight whirled
-and galloped hastily toward his mother. He dashed past her and thrust
-his muzzle into the cool water of the stream. Then he ran back to her
-side and stood staring at the striped brother, who was marching at an
-unhurried pace down the deer trail. The skunk’s aim had been low but he
-had taught Midnight another lesson. The striped one was master of all
-trails and not to be annoyed or disturbed.
-
-The musky smell hung so rank and strong over the meadow that Lady Ebony
-led her son to the lower end of the field where the breeze carried the
-smell away from them.
-
-Lady Ebony did not move on up the canyon to the long slopes dropping
-away from the higher benches of the Crazy Kill Range. There would
-still be chill nights and deep snowdrifts in the spruce near the peaks.
-She wandered slowly up the little stream, halting for days at a time
-in lush meadows where the grass was green and tender. Midnight grew
-rapidly; his legs became strong and steady. Lady Ebony watched over him
-constantly, never letting him stray far from her side. When he raced
-around a meadow she followed him, running at his side, urging him to
-greater speed.
-
-She remembered the things she had learned on the high mesa. When she
-made long stops she chose rock-bordered meadows where the yellowbelly
-whistlers lived. The yellowbellies always had sentries posted in the
-daytime. At night when the whistlers were deep in their burrows she lay
-down close beside her son.
-
-An afternoon came when she had need for her vigilance. From a high
-perch on a red rim a lank cougar sighted the mare and her colt. He was
-lying on a narrow shelf where the warm sun beat down on his sleek hide
-as he drowsed. Through slitted eyes he watched Lady Ebony and Midnight
-feeding below his lofty perch. There was no flesh he prized more highly
-than young colt. He twitched the black tip of his tail and unsheathed
-his sharp claws, but he did not move. Slow, sure, and patient methods
-were those of the yellow killer. Once he had waited on a ledge for four
-days in order to make a kill, a scrawny colt from a wild band. The colt
-in the meadow below would be easier prey because there was cover close
-to the tall grass.
-
-The king cat lay watching until late afternoon. He yawned many times
-and his red tongue arched between his long fangs as he opened his
-mouth. As long shadows began to creep out from the canyon walls he
-yawned again, a stretching yawn, then got slowly to his feet. He tested
-the wind and looked up and down the wall. Lank, sag-backed, with high
-shoulders and high, projecting hipbones, he was a killer to be feared
-even by a grown horse.
-
-The cougar slid down among the big rocks piled at the base of the
-walls. He moved on great padded feet without sound. Halting beside a
-rock almost the same color as his tawny robe he stood for a long time
-staring through the evening light on the pair below. Midnight was
-having his supper. He was feeding hungrily, butting his mother’s side,
-twitching his tail. The cougar stood, silent and unmoving, except for
-the tip of his tail which snapped back and forth nervously. His nine
-feet of stringy muscle and furry tail blended with the great rock
-beside him.
-
-He appeared not to be giving much attention to the scene below him.
-Really he was surveying the ground he had selected as a hunting spot
-and was missing no detail. He could creep out on the windward side of
-the mare where a clump of buckbrush grew. From there he would have two
-mighty leaps to make. He would wait until the colt had moved away from
-his mother’s side. Perhaps the youngster would wander close to the
-buckbrush. His black whiskers jerked and his yellow eyes flamed through
-slitted lids. Softly, silently he skirted the piled-up rocks and slid
-into the timber to windward of the feeding horses. Like a tawny shadow
-he passed from one bit of cover to the next, his lank belly close to
-the ground. He often halted his unhurried descent to stand staring down
-on his victim.
-
-On reaching the last of the cover he flattened his belly to the ground
-and crept forward through the tall grass. He kept moving, slowly,
-noiselessly, until he lay behind the clump of buckbrush. There he
-lifted his head and stared out through the green leaves.
-
-Midnight had finished his supper and was nosing about a few yards from
-his mother. Lady Ebony had dropped her head and was pulling grass. She
-turned slowly toward the open meadow, her back toward the killer. She
-had no thought of danger at the moment. The big cat listened intently.
-He wanted to be sure the yellowbelly whistlers had all gone in for the
-night. His head rested on his forepaws. There was no sound except that
-made by the horses, but he waited, rigid.
-
-The dusk deepened and the big cat stirred. He raised his head and
-peered out across the grass. And now his eyes were wide open, yellow
-pools of savage eagerness contrasting with his relaxed body. Midnight
-was strutting about, sniffing and snorting, humping his back and
-shaking his head. Lady Ebony was moving steadily away from the clump of
-buckbrush. The cat’s belly dropped to the grass, his hind legs drew up
-under him, his head flattened between his massive forepaws. His yellow
-eyes had located the exact spot where his first leap would land him,
-a bare spot where the grass was dead. From there he would hurtle upon
-the unwary colt. He meant to strike the little horse down with a broken
-neck so that no matter how well the mare might give battle the colt
-would lie waiting for him when she moved away.
-
-For a moment the great body of the king killer was tense and still,
-then he leaped, his body arching upward, his great claws reaching out
-before him. He landed noiselessly on the patch of dead grass and poised
-there a split second while he drew his legs under him; then he leaped
-again, rising high, hurling his body toward the colt.
-
-An odd quirk of energy made Midnight jerk up his head. He began bucking
-and bouncing. That sudden impulse saved him from the smashing blow the
-cougar intended to land. The yellow killer landed where Midnight had
-been standing. His scream of blood lust rang out, but his long fangs
-and ripping claws missed their target. Midnight squealed in terror as
-he saw the yellow killer clawing and lashing beside him. He plunged
-toward his mother, and Lady Ebony leaped to his rescue.
-
-She sprang at the enraged lion with uplifted hoofs lashing and
-flailing. Mother instinct had completely banished her fear of the
-yellow killer. The cougar reared back and lashed at her but he did not
-stand his ground. Before her hoofs could smash down on him he leaped
-back, spitting and snarling. Lady Ebony did not stop her charge. Her
-slender legs pumped madly. The cougar was knocked off his feet and
-sent sprawling in the grass. He rolled over, righted himself, then
-fled before the pounding hoofs of the infuriated mare. Reaching the
-cottonwood timber he bounded up a tree and lay licking his bruises and
-spitting angrily.
-
-Lady Ebony charged back to Midnight and shoved him up across the
-meadow. The cougar leaped down from the tree. Circling, he followed the
-pair, limping. Blood stained the weeds and tall grass along his trail.
-
-Lady Ebony headed out of the meadow and up a deer trail. She kept
-moving, forcing Midnight to stay close to her side. The white starlight
-dimly outlined rocks and trees. They came to an open meadow but she
-did not halt. Midnight forgot the fear that had very nearly paralyzed
-him. He wanted to stop and rest. In the center of the meadow his mother
-halted and let him drink. As he eagerly fed she kept testing the night
-air, stamping her feet nervously and looking back down the trail. When
-Midnight had finished his lunch she moved on toward the high, dim hills
-looming above the canyon.
-
-The cougar followed the trail of the horses for a while, but his
-smashed shoulder was giving him much pain, and he finally climbed on a
-ledge where he stretched his tawny length on a rocky bed and fell to
-licking the gash. Had he escaped unhurt he would have circled above
-the mare and her colt until he found a ledge from which he could attack
-again.
-
-Lady Ebony kept moving throughout the night. The gray dawn found her
-going steadily upward. Just before noon they entered the oak belt at
-the base of the Crazy Kill Range. There she found a stream and an open
-meadow. Midnight insisted upon lying down to rest. No amount of coaxing
-would rouse him. He lay stretched out in the sun and closed his eyes.
-Lady Ebony was hungry. She began feeding close to where he slept. By
-the time he had finished his sleep she was grazing peacefully.
-
-Mother and son spent long, sunny days in the meadow surrounded by oak
-brush. Lady Ebony seldom thought of the high mountain meadows. She had
-no desire to go anywhere at all. Midnight was beginning to feel that he
-was a grown horse. He danced and kicked and raced around. He even tried
-to make his mother do what he thought she should do. When she calmly
-ignored him and went on feeding he would lay back his ears and bare his
-teeth, nipping at her until she humped her back and threatened to lash
-out at him.
-
-Many enemies passed the meadow and several paused to look at the fat
-colt and his mother. Two old lobos halted and calmly watched the colt
-at play. Coyotes trotted through the meadow in pairs or singly. An
-old bear shambled out of the oak brush and charged after a ground
-squirrel. He passed close to the frightened mother and her son but paid
-no attention to them. The killers were finding life easy. The hills
-abounded with grouse and rabbits as well as every species of squirrel.
-There were many mule deer, too. Old does watched over playful fawns
-growing strong and independent. The killers need not face the lashing
-feet of an infuriated mother horse to kill all they could eat. So they
-looked and went their way.
-
-Midnight tried to make friends with the does. They were not afraid of
-him but they were not friendly. They stared at him out of calm eyes
-when he came near them, and they snorted and trotted at him when he
-tried to run with their fawns.
-
-One evening Midnight saw a deer feeding at the edge of a clearing. He
-trotted over to the big-eared one in a friendly manner. But this one
-was different from the does. He had long, branching antlers and snorted
-aggressively when he halted and whinnied eagerly. Midnight stood
-staring at the strange deer with branches on his head. The buck snorted
-again. His horns were beginning to harden and the velvet was dropping
-away from their sharp spikes. With the hardening process his shoulders
-had begun to swell and his temper was becoming uncertain.
-
-Midnight moved a little closer. He humped his back and kicked up his
-heels. The buck grunted angrily, then snorted. With a shake of his head
-he lowered his sweeping antlers and trotted toward the colt. Midnight
-circled and the buck circled. Midnight whirled and raced away. This
-fellow wanted to play. He’d give him a run around the meadow.
-
-The buck jerked up his head and shook it. He had routed the enemy and
-was satisfied. He began feeding again, cropping the weeds and shoots,
-champing steadily. Midnight circled and galloped back to the old buck.
-This time the big fellow charged. The colt realized that the antlered
-deer wanted to fight and not play. Kicking his heels high he fled to
-his mother’s side.
-
-Lady Ebony ran toward the buck and the big fellow bounded into the
-timber. Midnight felt he had won a great victory. He celebrated by
-charging around the meadow at a terrific pace. Lady Ebony watched him
-as he ran.
-
-But a day came when the mare felt an urge to move on. Summer had
-slipped away and fall had brought frost and sharp winds from the peaks
-above. The high, barren reaches above timber line were white with new
-snow. Lady Ebony remembered the roundup when riders came to the high
-mesa and drove the horses down to the feed grounds in the valley. She
-moved about restlessly and finally struck off up the slope. Winter was
-coming and she was ready to go down the long trail to the home ranch.
-Her brief training with the wild band was forgotten, she was again a
-willing captive of man’s way.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With the passing of summer Sam grew more listless and weary. He hated
-to take his daily walk in the padded yard behind the high walls which
-shut out the sight of his mountains. He preferred to sit in his cell
-and stare at the changing cottonwood branch. He had chalked another
-fall on his cell wall, but he thought about it for a week before he
-put the mark down. He was tired but he’d get over that once he was
-back on his mountain mesa where he could sit in the sun and watch his
-neighbors.
-
-
-
-
-7. The Way of the High Country
-
-
-There were many inviting meadows along the trail which led up to the
-high mesa. The aspen groves were inviting in the daytime, the rugged
-hillsides were rich with herbs and frost-ripened grass. Lady Ebony and
-Midnight did not hurry. Indian summer filled the valleys below with
-purple haze and the air was warm and smoky. They passed through a wild,
-rough country, across a high ridge by way of a deep saddle, then they
-dropped down to the mesa where Lady Ebony was born and where she had
-spent all her summers except one.
-
-Below the mesa the aspen belt flamed in garments of brilliant yellow.
-The rustling leaves would cling to the branches for a few more days.
-The first gale sweeping down from the snow peaks would loosen them
-and send them sailing to their beds along the slope. The oak belt,
-below the aspens, was red and purple like the upholstery of a piece
-of expensive furniture in its design and blending of color. Fall was
-flaunting its brightest colors for a few short days. Lady Ebony stood
-on the edge of the meadow and looked across the brown grass to Sam’s
-cabin, silent and deserted. She nickered softly and trotted toward
-the weathered cabin. Halting before the closed door, she pawed the
-ground and whinnied louder. There was no answer. Old Sam did not come
-shuffling out to give her lump sugar.
-
-The old yellowbelly sentinel chuckled from his perch on the high rock.
-He did not seem to understand that the black mare had been away. He did
-not shrill his warning whistle or jump down from his high perch. The
-calico chips dashed about in frantic haste, their cheeks pouched out
-with seeds and dry bits of roots. They realized that there was but a
-short time in which to complete their work of filling caches of food.
-The fat-bellied rockchips sat and stared into the blue-and-purple haze.
-They intended to do a little more work but the sun was warm and they
-were fat and lazy.
-
-A saucy chipmunk jumped to the top of a weed and sat there, swaying
-back and forth. His high-pitched “chock, chock, chock” rang across the
-meadow. Instantly every member of his tribe mounted a sing perch and
-their chorus rang out. The song pitched higher and shifted to “check,
-check, check, chir-r-r-up.”
-
-At the far end of the meadow the dog town burst into excited barking
-and saucy “squit-tuck’s.” Lady Ebony tossed her head. This was home
-and her welcome back was what it should be except for the closed door
-of the old cabin. Midnight bounded around, kicking his heels high
-and bucking. Lady Ebony walked around the cabin and sniffed eagerly.
-Her nose told her something was wrong. The familiar smells were dim
-and cold, the taint of Sam’s rank pipe, the pungent smell of the man
-himself, a smell so definite and different from that of the dwellers of
-the wild. Midnight raced about. He was not greatly interested in the
-cabin, though he had never seen or smelled anything like it before. He
-wanted to play, so he galloped away across the meadow, dry clods flying
-from his pounding hoofs.
-
-Lady Ebony settled down to wait. She expected Sam with his lumps of
-sugar and she expected Tex and the boys from the ranch. These thoughts
-were rather vague, but they were strong enough to keep her in the
-meadow and to overcome her uneasiness as her nose warned her of coming
-storms. A week of Indian summer passed with warm hazy days and snapping
-cold nights. Both Lady Ebony and Midnight had grown thick, warm coats
-and the nights did not bother them. Frost carpeted the meadow with
-white jewels every night, and every day the sun melted the frost. Sam
-did not come and Tex did not come galloping out of the timber at the
-head of his roundup crew. The crew had finished its work in the high
-country the week before Lady Ebony’s arrival, and had left the brown
-grass and the everlasting green spruce to the blizzards and the deep
-snows. The horses and the white-faced cattle were all accounted for.
-
-One afternoon a change came in the weather. The air had been snapping
-cold for days with the sun’s rays softening it but little. It became
-softer and warmer. Gray clouds raced over the timbered slopes, rolling
-low, touching the tops of the highest spruce. The gray wall swept down
-over the spruce and over the meadow. Snow began falling, big, soft
-flakes that sailed down like loosened leaves. The snow settled through
-a deep silence which filled the woods and lay heavy on the meadow. The
-chickaree squirrels in the tall spruce worked frantically, cutting
-cones from the branches, dropping them to the ground with steady,
-thumping sounds. They chattered and scolded as they worked. The old
-yellowbelly left his perch and romped to his den under the castle rock.
-The calico chips and the chipmunks and the fat-bellied brownies retired
-for the long night which was to last until spring came. The mesa was
-deserted, leaving only Lady Ebony, Midnight, and the big flakes of snow.
-
-The wind rose and came roaring down. The great spruces swayed and
-moaned as the wind rushed through their branches and tore at their
-needles. The big flakes were powdered to fine dust and eddied in and
-out among the brown grass stems. The aspen leaves danced and swirled as
-they floated from the white branches. In less than an hour the uplifted
-arms of the silver trees were naked. But where each leaf had loosened
-its hold a brown bud peeped down, wrapped up in a warm little muffler
-and hood. The round leaves whirled along the ground and piled deep on
-the lee side of big trunks and in deep hollows on the slope. Under the
-bed of leaves the columbine and the paint weed and the lupine felt
-safer and warmer.
-
-Lady Ebony led Midnight to the lee of the cabin where they stood with
-heads down, backs to the sifting snow. All afternoon the white wall
-pressed close around them. Darkness came early, a black, solid darkness
-which blotted out every object, even the cabin wall close to their
-noses. In the morning the blizzard was still raging furiously. The snow
-was deep on the meadow, as deep as the knees of the black colt.
-
-Lady Ebony fought her way out to the edge of the mesa and began pawing
-for grass. Midnight went with her and helped. They dug down and found
-a mat of rich, cured grass. With their tails to the lashing wind they
-fed. When they had eaten their fill they returned to the lee side of
-the cabin and Midnight had a scant but warm meal. Then he lay down.
-The snow melted around his body and froze into ice at the edges of the
-curves.
-
-For three days the storm raged. When it cleared and the last of the
-gray clouds scurried away over the tops of the green spruce on the
-wings of the dying wind three feet of snow lay on the level mesa and
-four or five feet in the hollows and drifts. In places the wind had
-swept the dry snow away from the grass and feeding was easy for the
-horses. But snapping, biting cold followed the storm, making their
-breath plume out in wreaths of white fog and causing icicles to form on
-their nose hair and chins. Their faces were covered with white frost
-from their breathing.
-
-Midnight showed keen interest in this new world. It was a white world,
-a silent world of snow and green spruce. The biting cold made him
-plunge through the deep drifts and snort eagerly. One other dweller of
-the high country, who could not sleep through the cold months, came to
-the meadow. An old timber-line buck had chosen to stay in the high mesa
-country defying the cold and the snow. The does and the fawns and the
-spike bucks had drifted downcountry before the storm. The two-points
-had gone with them and most of the four-points. The timber-line monarch
-stayed because he was wary and shunned the ranch-dotted valleys below
-the storm belt. He preferred the savage cold and the stalking killers
-to the rifles and dogs of the men who lived in the low country.
-
-He dug down into the snow seeking herbs and twigs. He did not care
-for the dry, rich grass, and he watched the mare and her colt without
-interest, staring at them, then shaking his heavy antlers and returning
-to his feeding. The old fellow knew the dangers he faced, he had met
-them before and expected to meet them again.
-
-The clear, cold weather held for a week. The days were sparkling and
-crisp, the nights blue and bitterly cold, with white stars reflecting
-their countless points of light upon the gleaming snow fields. In
-the aspen groves trees snapped and popped as the frost sought their
-hearts. Lady Ebony left the lee of the cabin and found a sheltered spot
-beside one of the big castle rocks at a point near the edge of the deep
-canyon. A narrow ledge trail led up to the shelter and an outthrust
-layer of rock furnished a roof so that the earth under the shelter was
-free from snow. A shoulder of the wall shut off the wind, making the
-retreat really a barn.
-
-A crevice in the roof of the shelter harbored a nest of pack rats.
-Sticks, pine cones, bright rocks, and other things dear to the heart of
-a trade rat had been crammed into the crevice until they spilled out on
-the floor. The whole cave was tainted with rat smell, pungent and musty.
-
-The black robes of the mare and her colt grew shaggy and thick, as
-the bitter cold deepened. Lady Ebony and Midnight were forced to seek
-grass at the upper end of the meadow below the cabin because the wind
-struck that part of the mesa, clearing the snow away. Every morning
-they plunged through deep drifts to reach the wind-swept portion of the
-meadow, returning again at night to their shelter.
-
-The week of clear weather was broken late one afternoon. Clouds began
-to cluster around the high spires of the Crazy Kills. They crept into
-high craters and wound around the tall, granite cathedrals on top of
-the world like great cats stalking their prey. Above they were silvery
-white and gleamed like jeweled blankets, below they were dark gray and,
-in spots, black.
-
-A feeble sun shone on the mesa, and two yellow sun-dogs blazoned forth
-on either side of it like sentinels. The air was still and the silence
-deep. Slowly the temperature rose and Midnight sniffed eagerly and
-plunged about in the snow. He was disturbed but did not know why. Lady
-Ebony jerked up her head and tested the air. She knew another storm was
-coming. Then the clouds rolled down over the spruce, blotting out the
-shining mountain peaks, the big soft flakes came and later the lashing
-wind. Another blizzard gripped the high mesa. With the wind came
-cutting cold that stabbed through even the thick coats of the horses.
-Lady Ebony headed across the meadow toward their shelter.
-
-For many days the blizzard raged and roared and the snow fell. When the
-storm cleared, the snow was deeper than it had been in many winters.
-It piled in great, hundred-foot drifts along the comb ridges, in lips
-which thrust themselves out over the spruce below. Slides roared into
-the canyons as those lips broke and shot down the steep slopes. The
-white terrors mowed swaths through the spruce and tore great boulders
-from their beds, grinding them to dingy gray rivers of twisting,
-roaring debris which cascaded into the creek bottoms and slid up the
-far slopes. The thunder of the slides shook the mesa and the ridges,
-starting new rivers of snow.
-
-When the white death roared, Midnight always crowded close to his
-mother’s side and stared up at the ridges trying to see the monster
-that could roar louder than any animal he had ever heard. Lady Ebony
-was disturbed but she nickered reassuringly to her son and did not lead
-a charge through the deep snow.
-
-Digging for food was a job which required all the short day. The upper
-end of the meadow still offered the best feed ground, though the snow
-lay three feet deep on that part of it. The timber-line buck came
-down from a bed in the rocks and fed close to the horses. He ate much
-grass now because he could not scoop the snow away so easily as the
-horses did. And he browsed on willow growing along the stream, but such
-feeding meant fighting snow six feet deep. Sometimes he followed the
-horses and ate the weeds they uncovered and left untouched.
-
-Lady Ebony and Midnight came to expect the timber-line buck to join
-them in their battle for food. The three fed close together in
-comradeship. Theirs was a common fight against a common enemy. The buck
-no longer charged at Midnight when the little horse walked up to him.
-And Lady Ebony no longer whinnied warningly when her son approached the
-antlered monarch.
-
-Life was hard for the three on the mesa, but not as hard as it was for
-the killers who roamed the silent forests. The gray wolves and the
-cougars hunted daily, their sides gaunt. The snowy owls beat along
-the edges of the timber, their glassy eyes staring down savagely. But
-there was little food. The snow had not crusted and the gray wolves
-and the cougars could not overtake the hardy mule deer remaining in
-the mountains. They wallowed and floundered while the deer and the elk
-bounded up and clear of the clinging drifts. Night and day the killers
-hunted with savage intensity, their yellow eyes flaming with savage
-hunger. When one of a wolf pack was wounded or crippled, the pack
-turned on him and devoured him as they would any lesser prey.
-
-A day came when the weather moderated, the sun shone, and the snow
-softened and settled. A warm wind blew from the valleys below. The wind
-melted the top snow to a depth of several inches. That night the cold
-returned, the trees popped, and the air was still and brittle. Frost
-crystals coated the willows along the stream and made brilliant jewelry
-of every branch and twig rising above the snow. The trees looked like
-rock candy. The slushy snow froze into ice and the world was coated
-with a hard armor. And now the gaunt killers could race swiftly over
-the surface while deer and elk broke through. The killers slaughtered
-savagely, gorging themselves on fresh meat until they could not run.
-The coyotes and the owls fed at the tables of the great ones after the
-hunters had passed on to fresh kills.
-
-Lady Ebony and Midnight found the battle to reach the cured grass
-under the snow much more difficult, now that the ice had come. They
-were forced to feed later into the night in order to fill their
-bellies. They pawed and smashed at the thick armor covering the
-drifts. A full moon shone down, its white light flashing back from the
-glistening ice. The air was snapping cold as night settled, but Lady
-Ebony delayed returning to their shelter. They had not fed well that
-day. She was pawing down the crust, then scooping away the loose snow.
-The old timber-line buck followed close behind the two horses. He was
-gaunt and lank. His slender hoofs made poor weapons against the ice.
-
-The air was still with the stillness of a dead world. Suddenly Lady
-Ebony jerked up her head. From the ridge above the mesa came the cry
-of an old lobo wolf and his bachelor pack. They were racing down from
-the high barrens seeking prey. The old lobo had not led his sons into
-the lower country. He was wise and cunning and had kept his pack high
-above the ranches with their poison sets, their traps, and their guns.
-He preferred the savage struggle of the snow-locked high country to the
-sure death lurking in the open valleys. He had ranged above the belt
-where the deer and the elk wintered and had not led his sons to a kill
-in more than a week. The slaughter going on lower down the slope had
-not been shared by these gaunt killers.
-
-Lady Ebony listened intently. The pack was running down the ridge above
-the mesa. She shook her head restlessly and looked across the meadow
-toward the castle rocks. Turning she took a few steps toward the lower
-end of the meadow. The timber-line buck grunted protestingly as he
-floundered out of her way. Midnight kept on digging in the snow. He was
-still hungry. The snarling of the pack sounded farther down the ridge
-and Lady Ebony turned back to where Midnight was pawing. The howling
-rose in savage crescendo. The pack had swerved and was heading toward
-the meadow.
-
-The timber-line buck did not wait to listen. He began floundering and
-plunging across the open toward the woods where he knew the warm sun
-had not softened the snow so that it crusted. Here he could double and
-bound; his speed would save him from the gray ones.
-
-Lady Ebony snorted and whirled. She took one long leap, then halted and
-looked back, nickering loudly, warningly. Midnight stood looking at
-her. He was chewing a mouthful of grass he had pulled from under the
-snow. He swallowed the grass and thrust his head back into the hole. He
-had found a good mat of grass and meant to finish it. The howling pack
-did not disturb him greatly. He had never been attacked by wolves. All
-the wolves he had met had loped away when he ran toward them.
-
-Lady Ebony leaped back to his side and crowded against him. She
-whinnied excitedly and pawed the snow, then whirled and leaped a few
-yards toward the rocky point. Midnight pulled up a tasty mouthful of
-grass and munched at it, then dived down for more. Lady Ebony was
-frantic. She plunged at him and nipped his rump sharply.
-
-Midnight’s hips jerked and he lashed out with his hoofs, striking his
-mother a smashing blow. She had never bitten him so severely before and
-his temper flared. Lady Ebony charged at him again. She had to make him
-follow her.
-
-Up in the spruce the old lobo heard her whinny and the tone of his
-howls changed from hungry yelping to savage eagerness. Instantly his
-sons, leaping at his side, took up the cry. After many days of stark
-hunger the old one had led them to a kill.
-
-The gray killers burst out of the darkness under the spruce, running
-madly, their fangs gleaming, their red tongues lolling. They flashed
-into the gleaming moonlight like shadows. Midnight jerked up his head.
-He saw the glowing, yellow eyes of the killers, the white fangs, and
-the red tongues as the wolves leaped across the crusted snow. Fear
-gripped him, and with a wild squeal of fright he plunged away, breaking
-through the crust, floundering, stumbling.
-
-Lady Ebony did not rush after him. She knew they could not both escape
-the swift shadows so close upon them. With a toss of her flowing mane
-she plunged toward the pack. After charging a few yards she halted and
-her front hoofs rose. A defiant, screaming cry came from her chest.
-The wolves leaped in on her, dodging her flailing hoofs, their fangs
-reaching from every side. The old lobo leaped straight at her throat
-while his sons swarmed around her. One smashing hoof struck the lobo
-and sent him spinning across the glare of ice. But as she hurled the
-old one from her, two young wolves ripped her flanks while another tore
-a gash in her shoulder. They leaped and lashed and ripped, springing
-in, darting away.
-
-Lady Ebony could not run and the deep snow kept her from pivoting to
-meet the rear attack. She was doomed and she knew it, but she did not
-try to plunge away. Her son was floundering to the safety of the ledge
-and she had to hold the pack where they were until he reached the
-castle rocks.
-
-The old lobo scrambled to his feet. Lady Ebony’s flank was turned to
-him. He leaped and his fangs sank deep, driving toward the tendons
-of her leg. He did not waver and spring away. He struck with savage
-recklessness. His sharp fangs severed the tendons and Lady Ebony went
-down. Instantly the whole pack swarmed over her, tearing at her sleek
-coat.
-
-Midnight plunged on across the meadow. The pack was so busy tearing at
-the black mare that they did not follow him. He reached the ledge trail
-and plunged up to a shelf where there was room for him to whirl about.
-He stood staring out across the meadow, listening to the snarling of
-the pack as they fed on the carcass lying in the snow. He was still
-standing there when the pack turned away from the bloody bones of his
-mother and began looking for him.
-
-They picked up his trail and raced across the gleaming snow. He watched
-them come, and courage, the courage of a cornered animal, plus the wild
-and savage fighting heart given him by the chestnut stallion came to
-him. He shrilled a challenge and reared up on his hind feet, his little
-ears laid back, his teeth bared.
-
-The old lobo was the first to leap up the ledge trail. He lunged at the
-black colt. Midnight’s lashing hoofs met him and sent him tumbling back
-upon his leaping sons. The bachelors swept past their father and closed
-in. They were not so hungry but the blood lust ran hot within them.
-They wanted to kill again and their easy victory over the mare made
-them feel certain of their victim.
-
-One of the youngsters leaped at Midnight’s throat. Two lashing hoofs
-met the gray body in mid-air. The killer screamed with rage and pain
-as his body writhed on the snow. He slid down toward the canyon rim
-and over the edge, hurtling into the shadowy depths below. Another
-youngster leaped and was smashed back.
-
-The pack backed away from the flailing hoofs. Their bellies were gorged
-with meat and much of their savageness had left them. There was no way
-to surround the colt or to leap at his flanks. They sat down on the
-snow and glared at him, their yellow eyes flaming eagerly, their red
-tongues dripping as they extended above white fangs. The old lobo
-licked his wounds and growled deep in his chest.
-
-Midnight waited, poised. But they did not attack again. One killer lay
-dead at the base of the canyon wall, while another crawled around on
-the snow, snarling and whimpering, his ribs caved in by the hoofs of
-the little stallion. Presently the old lobo got to his feet. He made a
-feint toward Midnight, but when the pounding hoofs lifted menacingly he
-turned and trotted away with his pack close behind him. They paid no
-attention to the wounded wolf.
-
-Out on the meadow Midnight heard them pause at the carcass of his
-mother and begin feeding again. He stood for a long time listening,
-nickering softly, calling to his mother, trying to tell her that he had
-beaten the pack. There was no answer except the pack’s snarling and the
-yelp of a coyote that had smelled the fresh blood and come to the edge
-of the woods to wait until the gray ones were done with their banquet.
-
-Midnight stood guard until the pack finished worrying the bones in the
-meadow. After they had loped away into the timber he turned back to the
-shelter and stood waiting for his mother.
-
-
-
-
-8. The Strong Survive
-
-
-When the little black stallion came out of his shelter the morning
-after the wolf raid the sun was shining on the glare of ice which
-covered the meadow. The old timber-line buck was plunging toward the
-feed ground. Midnight whinnied eagerly for his mother and shook his
-head impatiently. He was hungry and wanted her badly. When he got no
-answer he moved down the ledge trail. At the spot where the wolves had
-attacked him he halted and sniffed the snow, blowing loudly, pawing the
-ground angrily.
-
-He moved out across the meadow. The old buck lifted his head from a
-hole in the snow and stared at him. Midnight whinnied again. He was
-glad to see the buck calmly feeding. It drove away some of the fear
-that he felt because he could not see his mother. The buck dropped his
-head to feed. Midnight walked to the place where the snow was spattered
-with blood. He sniffed and shied back. Standing with legs apart and
-head bent forward, he looked at the frost-coated pile of bones lying
-in the trampled snow. Breaking a trail around the spot he moved close
-to the monarch and began breaking the crusted snow. The buck let him
-feed close to his side but when the little horse would have shouldered
-against him he jerked up his head and snorted. He shook his bony
-lances threateningly and Midnight backed away.
-
-Midnight set to work pawing, breaking the crust and scooping the
-loose snow aside. He worked steadily all through the day, pausing at
-intervals to call for his mother. Two lean coyotes came out of the
-spruce and slipped across the meadow. A little fox thrust his sleek
-head out of a thicket which had been swept clear of snow. He wrinkled
-his nose as he crept forward. His furry, red brush waved back and
-fourth. Hunger had driven the three hunters into the open in the white
-light of day, hunger and the smell of fresh meat. The coyotes poked
-among the bones gnawing and snarling. The little fox sat down to watch
-and to wait. He was sure there would be a few bits of gristle left for
-him.
-
-Midnight snorted and shook his head at the coyotes. He pawed into the
-drift savagely, then rushed at the coyotes as far as his trail went.
-The coyotes leaped back from the carcass and faced him snarling and
-snapping. Midnight stared at them for a long time, then turned and went
-back to his feeding. He was learning the lessons of the wild.
-
-A lynx cat with tufted ears and big furry pads on his feet thrust his
-head from behind a drift. He, too, had forsaken the twilight of the
-spruce country, which was his natural home. He blinked his eyes before
-the glare of the sun and stared at the pair of coyotes and the little
-fox. His nose twitched hungrily. He seldom ventured far from the green
-dusk of the forest but he had eaten only one small morsel in two days,
-a field mouse dug from the roots of a dead aspen tree. His green eyes
-fixed on the little fox and he shifted his padded feet nervously. He
-had feasted on fox before and the stringy meat was to his liking.
-
-At the same moment the fox’s sharp eyes and pointed nose discovered
-the lynx cat. Turning, the sly one raced over the crust toward his
-burrow in the thicket. The lynx cat bounded over the snow, cutting
-across to head the fox away from his hole. The little fox ran swiftly
-but he had a greater distance to go. The cat closed in swiftly and the
-fox whirled to face him. The lynx arched his back and circled slowly
-around his intended victim. He knew the fox had deadly fangs and that
-he would use them. The sly one was shy and timid but he could fight
-when cornered. The air was filled with the yowling and spitting of the
-lynx and the snarling of the fox. Both coyotes sat up and watched.
-Midnight and the big buck jerked up their heads and stared at the
-battlers. The old buck sniffed the cat scent and made off along his
-trail to the timber. Midnight stood still. He was afraid but did not
-know what to do.
-
-The big lynx cat circled a second time. He was cautious even though he
-was desperately hungry. With a lightning movement he leaped at the fox,
-who was crouched down with his chest on the snow. The fox leaped to
-meet him and slashed at him savagely. A big tuft of hair from the cat’s
-neck scruff sailed high and floated to the snow. The cat backed away
-spitting, his big feet planted wide apart.
-
-When the lynx leaped back the little fox whirled and raced for the
-timber. He had tricked the cat and his red tongue lolled out over
-his white teeth very much as though he was laughing at his clumsy
-antagonist.
-
-The lynx bounded after him and the fox whirled again. Again the fox
-made a stand and the dweller of the spruce twilight circled around
-him. Again the lynx leaped and was met by the lashing fangs of the
-slim hunter of mice. The cat leaped back and red drops of blood dotted
-the snow. Both times his lashing paws had missed the dodging, weaving
-fox. The fox whirled and ran, this time almost to his thicket. The
-lynx bounded upon him and he whirled, his brush sweeping across the
-glistening snow.
-
-The lynx did not strike again. If the snow had been soft and loose he
-would have been the victor and would have feasted upon the carcass of
-the tough little fox, because his snowshoe feet would have carried him
-over the surface while the fox floundered. The hard crust which spelled
-death for the elk and the deer gave the little fox a surer chance to
-live. Slowly the fox backed to his den under the bushes. He halted in
-the opening and crouched there, his muzzle resting on his forepaws, his
-little eyes flaming.
-
-The lynx cat arched his back and sidled up to the den, spitting and
-snarling. He halted well out of reach of the flashing attack of the
-little hunter. He sat down and stared back at the fox. Finally he
-walked away to a drift. He hoped the fox would venture away from his
-hole under the bushes. But the fox could see the big fellow seated on
-the drift. He drowsed, his eyes half closed, waiting for the killer to
-tire and go his way. Finally the lynx cat got up and padded back into
-the spruce.
-
-Two eagles came and the great owls beat along the edge of the clearing.
-The wolf pack raced down along the ridge at dusk, seeking the little
-stallion. But Midnight and the old buck were safe in their shelters
-long before dusk. Both remembered the experience of the previous night
-and left the feed ground early. They bedded down on stomachs only half
-filled, but they rested better than the killers who could not get even
-half a meal.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There came days of sunshine and days of storm. When the blizzard came
-the wind swept the new snow across the hard, smooth surface of the
-meadow, piling it in the timber or swirling it into the deep canyon.
-
-One cloudy day a lean cougar padded through the spruce at the upper
-edge of the mesa. He halted and stared out over the sheet of glistening
-ice. His yellow eyes suddenly flamed with eagerness. He had sighted the
-timber-line buck and the little stallion. His amber eyes flicked over
-the old buck and fastened on the colt beside him. His nose jerked and
-the black tip of his tail twitched. It seemed almost beyond any good
-luck to find a fat colt and a buck deer together. He had hunted for
-days and was heading toward the lower country. The only living things
-he had met were wolves and coyotes as hungry as himself.
-
-The cougar moved to the edge of the woods, his eyes wandering over the
-snowy expanse. It did not seem possible for the colt to escape him.
-The little horse had a long way to go to reach cover. The snow was
-crusted so that the killer could bound over it while the horse would
-break through and flounder. He located a drift which ran out into the
-meadow like the fin of a great fish. He would slip out along that fin.
-He would not need to get close. His eyes roved eagerly over the meadow,
-seeking to locate any weak point in his plan of attack.
-
-Midnight and the old buck fed steadily, the buck following the trail
-Midnight had broken. He was about twenty yards back of the little
-stallion. Midnight pulled a tuft of grass up out of the snow and chewed
-it eagerly. Swallowing it he ducked his head and nosed about for more.
-He pulled another mouthful and looked around him. He was fast learning
-the tricks of the old buck. Look, listen, test the air after every
-exploration under the crust.
-
-It was the buck who warned him of danger. The monarch snorted loudly
-and whirled about. The wind had shifted and his keen nose had caught
-cougar scent. Midnight looked and saw the gaunt killer rising above
-the drift in a long, high leap. The big cat screamed savagely,
-angered because he had been discovered before he was ready to attack.
-Midnight plunged after the old buck. The cougar landed on the hard
-crust, skidded, then righted himself and bounded again. His leaps
-were terrific and carried him down quickly on the two struggling and
-panic-stricken comrades. His ears were flattened and his tail was
-lashing. His yellow eyes checked the distance he had to cover. His
-last leap must send him smashing down on the back of the colt. His
-tawny body shot upward and out in a twenty-foot leap, while his claws
-unsheathed and he bared his fangs for the death thrust.
-
-With a wild plunge of speed Midnight charged past the old buck. The
-ancient monarch was a scarred warrior. He had been attacked by cougars
-before and had always managed to escape. This time he was trapped. He
-could not flounder to the deep, soft drifts in the spruce. Like any
-wild thing, he whirled to fight because that was all there was left for
-him to do. He had lived to old age in the high country because he had
-been able to meet desperate situations. When he whirled he lowered his
-sharp antlers until they formed a shield for his neck and shoulders.
-
-The leap of the yellow killer had been aimed and timed so that its
-force would smash down on the back of the colt. Instead of smashing
-upon the unprotected back of the little horse the cougar landed upon
-the bony lances of the old buck. His hundred pounds of weight hurtling
-down on those horns would have been damaging enough, but the old
-timber-line monarch charged forward just as the cat landed, adding to
-the effectiveness of the defense. The buck was smashed back on his
-haunches, but instantly his powerful legs straightened and with a grunt
-he lunged again.
-
-The lances of bone drove deep into the chest and neck and legs of the
-cougar. When the buck lunged he twisted those knives and drove them
-deeper. He ripped and tore in mad fury. Flight was forgotten now that
-he was in a battle. He thought only of destroying his attacker. The
-cougar was startled by this attack from a prey which had always fled in
-a wild fear before him. He screamed savagely as he struggled to toss
-his body out of the path of the ripping horns. Rolling over and over in
-the snow he scrambled away from the charging deer.
-
-The buck made another lunge but the big cat had had enough. He bounded
-away across the snow leaving a trail of blood which froze in round red
-jewels on the crust.
-
-The buck shook his head and snorted savagely. Midnight watched him
-from the safety of the ledge. Finally the little horse trotted down
-the trail to meet the monarch, who was stalking along, his rump patch
-fanned out, his breath whistling angrily. Midnight halted before the
-buck, and they stood looking at each other.
-
-After that the bond was a little closer between the two. Midnight
-realized that there was safety in being close to the big buck. He
-was convinced the old fellow was the master of the yellow killers so
-terrifying to him. The monarch gave the matter no thought. He had
-escaped from another cougar, but he did not intend to allow one to get
-near him if his nose and his keen sight warned him in time. But he
-followed Midnight’s trail and ate the weeds and brush tips the little
-horse uncovered and left.
-
-So the cold winter passed. The pair who came daily to the meadow kept
-vigilant watch for the killers and slipped away from the feed ground
-early each night. The little stallion was nearly as quick of sight and
-smell as the old buck by the time the snow began to soften. They were
-always hungry, never able to dig up enough grass and feed to fill
-their stomachs, but they were also wary and alert.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Spring waited for them on the snow-bound meadow one morning when they
-came down to feed. A chinook wind was blowing and the air was soft,
-promising life, alive with earthy smells carried up from the lower
-valleys where green things were already growing on the south slopes and
-in the canyons. Midnight bucked and pranced excitedly. The old buck
-shook his head and grunted. He was a sad-looking monarch now. His sides
-were thick with matted hair and he had shed one horn so that he was
-forced to carry his head on the side. He moved about more timidly and
-seemed eager to be near the black colt.
-
-The snow settled down and down. At night it froze but not with the
-bitter hardness of the deep winter. Each day the snow sank lower and
-packed harder. It shrank until bare patches of meadow appeared. Then it
-retreated into the spruce where it would make its last stand against
-the sun. There were blustery days when snow fell and raw winds blew,
-but this was spring and nothing could halt its coming.
-
-The wolves and the coyotes raced across the bare ground, leaping over
-the dirty drifts in the shade, racing on and on, as fast as the steady
-wind which blew up out of the green valleys below. The wolves were not
-seeking prey, they were running in pairs, leaping through the dusky
-twilight or the pale moonlight, seeking romance on distant ridges,
-trysting places under the stars.
-
-The resurrection came swiftly. Grass sprouted and flowers shoved forth
-their buds, some of them poking out their hardy blossoms at the edges
-of the drifts in the twilight of the woods. But the real and certain
-arrival of spring was announced by the yellowbelly whistlers. They
-awoke and came out of their dens to blink at the sun. They romped
-across the bare meadow and bounded among the rocks at the base of the
-castles. A day or so after the whistlers had come out the calico chips
-appeared. They had been ready for some time but had been careful not to
-hurry.
-
-One day the chipmunks appeared. They held a concert at once, and the
-meadow rang with their “chock, chocking.” The fat little brownies came
-with the chipmunks. They selected stones and spent much of their time
-sitting in silence looking down into the blue valley. Only the cabin at
-the edge of the timber remained lifeless and dead. It went on sleeping.
-Its one dusty window stared out drearily on the lively scene. Its door
-did not open to let the spring air into the cabin, there was no one to
-open it. The willow chair sagged beside the doorstone. It sat there
-much as though it had stepped outside to wait for the owner of the
-cabin.
-
-Midnight became restless. He raced around the meadow and mud flew from
-his hoofs as he splashed through puddles in the hollows. The only spot
-he avoided was the dog town. There the ground was soft and the holes
-made it treacherous. The dogs barked and scolded when he thundered
-past but they accepted him as one of them. He whinnied and kicked and
-pranced. The old whistler, perched on his high lookout, stretched his
-neck, chuckled several times, then pulled his head back into his ball
-of fur.
-
-Midnight still used the shelter under the rim. Habit made him return to
-it at dusk. The old timber-line buck knocked off his remaining horn,
-then wandered into the twilight of the spruce and did not come out
-again. He would seek a sun-drenched glade where he could nurse his new
-antlers through the period when they were in the velvet. In a short
-time nubbins of furry, blood-filled soft horns would appear, rising
-from the scars of his old spread. During this time the monarch would
-be quiet and shy. He would not fight and he would avoid charges which
-would take him into the timber.
-
-Midnight was climbing the ledge trail one night when he was faced by
-a strange and terrible creature. A great silvertip, with the sleep of
-winter still dulling his little eyes, came shambling down the narrow
-ledge. He was gaunt and in a savage mood. Midnight had come to consider
-this as his own trail. He had met the wolf pack almost on the spot
-where he now stood. He snorted and reared on his hind feet. The old
-silvertip kept on shambling toward him. Midnight laid back his ears and
-squealed. The ledge was too narrow to turn about easily, and it was his
-ledge.
-
-Then the little stallion got a good whiff of rank bear scent and panic
-seized him. He tried to whirl about but the ledge was too narrow. The
-very thing that had made the ledge safe for him against the wolf pack
-made it a trap now. He reared again and his trim hoofs lashed out at
-the massive head and hairy chest of the silvertip.
-
-The old bear saw the little horse for the first time when Midnight
-reared. His great jaws opened and a roar came up from his chest. He
-did not desire meat to eat, he wanted certain herbs and he wanted
-cold water, things to help his shrunken stomach adjust itself. But he
-never gave the trail to any except the skunk and the wolverine. In his
-present mood he was ready to smash anything that tried to halt him.
-
-He straightened up and stood like a shaggy giant, advancing as a
-man would. One massive paw swept out. The blow struck Midnight with
-glancing force. Had it landed squarely it would have finished him. It
-over-balanced him and he slid off the trail. Kicking and lashing he
-plunged over the canyon rim.
-
-The old silvertip shoved a swaying head over the edge and growled
-deeply, then he ambled down the trail and headed across the meadow,
-growling and grunting to himself. The yellow-belly sentinel blasted
-shrilly and the little dwellers of the meadow raced to their dens. The
-dogs slid down their runways and defiant “squit-tucks” came out of the
-ground. The silvertip paid no attention to the commotion he had caused.
-He strode on across the mesa.
-
-Midnight dropped a few yards and landed with a thump on another ledge.
-A pile of earth matted with grass and berry bushes broke his fall. His
-head hung over a yawning chasm. Quickly he gathered himself together
-and scrambled to his feet. For a few minutes he stood pressing against
-the rock wall and trembling; he saw that he was on a ledge which sloped
-gently down to the meadow. There was no chance to leap back to the
-trail above, so he moved along the cliff, sliding, crowding against the
-wall.
-
-He slid off the ledge onto solid ground matted with dry grass. He was
-in a cup-shaped hollow on the side of the canyon wall. He trotted
-through a matted tangle of willow and brush to the edge of the basin.
-From where he stood he could look down into Shadow Canyon. He could see
-the foaming waters of the Crazy Kill River. But a sheer wall prevented
-him from climbing down, so he explored the hollow.
-
-There were not more than seven acres in the basin. Aspens grew close
-together over most of the ground, except in the center where a beaver
-colony had cut them away. In this clearing nestled a tiny lake.
-Two old beavers were swimming around in the water, inspecting the
-horseshoe-shaped dam at the lower side. When Midnight halted at the
-edge of the water the old beavers dived, slapping their tails with
-explosive sounds.
-
-Midnight turned away from the lake. He did not like the confining feel
-of this little mesa. He limped as he walked and his shoulder pained
-him, but he was not hurt badly. He wandered all the way around the mesa
-and discovered no trail leading off it except at the lower end where a
-ten-foot crevice cut through a ledge along the side of the canyon wall.
-He turned back and began feeding uneasily on the green shoots pushing
-up through the dead grass.
-
-The old beavers came up again and set to work. A ptarmigan strutted
-in the dry leaves under the aspens and a snowshoe rabbit hopped out
-of a thicket. The big bunny sat down and began nibbling on a tender
-weed-stalk.
-
-
-
-
-9. Prisoner
-
-
-Midnight fed on the rich, new grass until he was no longer hungry, then
-he made another trip around the rim and along the cliff wall. He wanted
-to escape from this tight little pasture. The only avenue of escape lay
-across the crevice and along the ledge beyond. Midnight stood at the
-edge of the yawning abyss and shook his head restlessly. The leap was a
-long one, too long for him to try.
-
-The little stallion turned back to the beaver lake. The pair of beavers
-were busily lacing willows along the top of their dam. As they wove the
-willows into place they plastered black mud on them. They were master
-engineers, and their dam was sturdy and strong. They stopped work and
-gazed at Midnight but they did not plunge into the water. They accepted
-him as one of the dwellers of their little world under the rim, a
-harmless animal who would not attack them.
-
-Midnight trotted into the aspen grove and lay down. Above him green
-buds were bursting and pale-green leaves had begun to show. The bushes
-along the wall were leaved out and many flowers bloomed. The little
-mesa lay facing the sun. Its protected acreage afforded growing things
-a chance to get started before other mesas came to life. The spot
-Midnight had picked for his bed was near the cliff face. He could see
-the rim above. A group of five Englemann’s spruce grew near the wall.
-Their straight trunks towered well above the rim and looked out across
-the high mesa where the cabin stood. One of them grew so close to the
-cliff face that its trunk touched the rim above.
-
-Midnight drowsed, his eyes fixed lazily upon the leaning spruce.
-Suddenly they popped wide open. He saw a big brown bear slide off the
-rim above and come down the trunk, sliding and scraping the bark loose
-in a shower of wood bits. The bear was descending tail first, moving
-around the tree as he came down.
-
-The black colt scrambled to his feet. The memory of the savage
-silvertip was fresh in his mind. He tossed his head and snorted loudly.
-The brown bear halted his descent and peered down at him, then began
-to slide again. Then Midnight saw another bear, larger than the first,
-swinging off the mesa above. The big fellow came down amid a shower of
-bark and twigs. Midnight whirled and fled as far as he could get away
-from the spruces. He halted and stood watching the two bears, ready to
-dodge and run if they charged at him.
-
-The two bears paid no attention to Midnight. They grunted and growled
-as they walked into the aspen grove, where they prowled about rooting
-into the dead leaves, overturning rotting logs. Then both sat up
-letting their big paws droop over their shaggy bellies. They sat
-looking up at the spruce trees. Down the leaning tree came two more
-bears. Midnight pawed frantically but he was as far away from the bears
-as he could get. The two newcomers joined the first pair in the aspen
-grove. There was much growling and grunting, with many deep woofs
-added. Midnight remained where he was, trembling and pawing the ground.
-Within an hour seven bears had arrived by way of the leaning spruce,
-and the grove was noisy with their gruff voices.
-
-One he-bear walked to an aspen tree. Lifting himself to his full height
-he gashed a mark on the trunk with his teeth. Another male, who had
-been sitting watching him, got to his feet and walked to the tree. He
-gashed the tree higher than the other had been able to reach. Then
-a big fellow with a furry red face strolled to the tree. He grunted
-several times as he stood up. He marked the tree a full six inches
-above the highest mark, then dropped to the ground and faced the
-other bears. The males backed away from him as though recognizing his
-superior prowess. He strolled to one of the she-bears and nosed against
-her. She accepted the caress and the big male turned toward the spruce
-trees. He ambled to the leaning tree and started to climb. The she-bear
-followed him obediently.
-
-One of the other males edged close to a female, rumbling in his chest
-as he moved toward her. Another male stepped forward and the two big
-fellows faced each other. An angry argument followed. The aspen grove
-rang with the roars of the two males, but they did not fight. One of
-them backed away and the other led the she-bear to the sloping spruce
-in triumph. They went up the tree and out on the mesa.
-
-There were two males and one female left. The smaller fellow, a
-smudged, black-faced bear, had edged close to the last she-bear. He
-woofed and grunted in an attempt to get her to go with him, but she
-just sat and looked up into the aspen branches. The larger he-bear
-walked toward her. The little bear with the black face crowded in front
-of her, growling warningly.
-
-The big bear shuffled up to him, reared, and cuffed him hard alongside
-of the head. The little fellow danced up and down and his roars shook
-the branches of the aspens and echoed along the rock walls, but he
-backed away from the she-bear.
-
-The big fellow walked around her and grunted deeply. Then he headed
-toward the leaning tree against the wall. She followed him while the
-little bear sat with a sad expression on his face watching them. He
-remained where he was until they had climbed out onto the mesa above.
-He whined a little, ambled to the tree, and began climbing out of the
-basin.
-
-The love moon of the bears had risen. This secluded spot was the scene
-of their first summer romancing. The pairs would wander away into the
-woods and remain together for a while. Midnight did not understand the
-nature of the gathering, but he did realize that they had not come to
-the mesa prison to attack him. He edged out toward the grove which
-reeked with bear scent. Snorting and jerking his head, he trotted
-around to the lower end of the mesa where he nibbled a few blades of
-grass. The wind carried the strong bear smell to him and he moved to
-the upper end again where he bedded down for the night.
-
-Then next morning while Midnight was feeding close to the beaver lake
-he met another stranger. The animal was not large and it waddled
-along at a slow pace. It had long, yellowish hair and it seemed
-too dull-witted and slow to be dangerous. Midnight advanced. The
-dull-witted one lifted the hair on his back but otherwise paid no
-attention to the little horse.
-
-Midnight had never met a porcupine. He thought the spines sticking out
-of his back were long hairs. The dull gnawer of bark sat down when
-Midnight got close to him. Only his tail moved, jerking up and down.
-Midnight extended his soft muzzle and sniffed in a friendly manner. He
-kept his legs planted wide so that he could leap if the porky came to
-life suddenly and attacked him. The gnawer did not move, he huddled
-into a ball of spiny fur, pulling his head back until only the tip of
-his snout showed. Midnight tossed his head and pawed, his nose extended
-closer as he sniffed and sniffed. Suddenly he felt a quick stab of pain
-in his tender muzzle. He leaped back with a snort. An ivory barb that
-was half black with ebony stuck out of his lower lip.
-
-Midnight galloped away through the aspens, across the little meadow to
-the far side. The pain in his lip increased as the barb dug deeper.
-He halted and thrust his muzzle into the fresh, black dirt of a
-pocket-gopher mound. He raked his nose back and forth in the damp
-earth. The cool dirt soothed the burning sting but it also drove the
-barb deeper into the tender flesh. Midnight next tried rubbing the
-wounded spot against the trunk of a tree. The quill caught in the
-rough bark and pulled free. It came away red with a little piece of
-Midnight’s flesh clinging to it.
-
-After that he left the dull gnawer of bark strictly alone. The porky
-fed on the meadow or in the tops of the low bushes where he hung like a
-spiny ball. His clicking grumble could be heard at any time during the
-day.
-
-And each day Midnight circled his prison seeking a way to get off the
-mesa. He was uneasy and wanted more room. There was plenty of feed
-and there was water, but there was no room to gallop. The confinement
-worried him. He was not like the dull porky or the beavers, he was used
-to wide spaces and an elevation from which he could look down on the
-world. From the little mesa he could see nothing but trees, the canyon
-wall, and the lake.
-
-One day late in the spring two men rode down past the cabin at the edge
-of the mesa. The meadow was green with waving grass, flowers rioted
-in their hurry to produce seed before the brief high-country summer
-slipped away. The ridges were blue with lupine or gold with mountain
-daisies. In the shade clumps of columbine lifted their delicate blue
-bells, exposing white hearts. Major Howard and his range boss, Tex,
-were riding together.
-
-Tex halted near the upper end of the meadow. He slid to the ground and
-bent over a scattered mass of bones. Major Howard lighted his pipe and
-waited. The eyes of the range boss were intent. He remained bent over
-the bones so long that the major spoke impatiently.
-
-“What’s so interesting about a pile of bones?”
-
-Tex straightened and his eyes wandered to Sam’s cabin thoughtfully.
-
-“Winter kill by a pack of wolves,” he said briefly.
-
-“A horse the boys missed in the roundup?” the major asked with a show
-of interest.
-
-Tex nodded. “Some hide and hair left,” he said and his slow smile
-showed for a moment. “I reckon this hoss was Lady Ebony.”
-
-The major did not dismount. But he turned his horse and stared down at
-the bones. He knew what Tex was thinking and it irritated him. He shook
-his head grimly.
-
-“Couldn’t be,” he said shortly.
-
-“I figure it that way,” Tex answered. “It explains a lot of things fer
-me.”
-
-“You never did think old Sam stole that mare,” Major Howard said.
-
-“No,” Tex replied quietly.
-
-“I did and I still do. You cow-country boys are too soft-livered. The
-old fellow left his cabin for three weeks or so. He refused to tell
-where he had been. He had three hundred dollars in cash to pay an
-attorney. He refused to tell where he got the money.” The major’s lips
-pulled into a tight line. “You’ll have to dig up more proof than that
-pile of bones.” He was staring at the desolate cabin, trying hard to
-urge away the doubt Tex had raised in his mind. Major Howard was at
-heart fair and honest. He smiled suddenly. “I wouldn’t be surprised to
-see that mare at one of the races this summer.”
-
-Tex shook his head. “You won’t see her at any track, boss.” He paused
-and his gaze was somber; he was watching the chipmunks romping in the
-grass over by the castle rocks. Sam had brought those little fellers
-in. He’d be right surprised to know there was at least a half dozen
-more of them now. Tex made a mental note of the increase. He’d tell Sam
-when he stopped by to see him.
-
-“The old fool is better off where he is. He has decent grub and a warm
-place to sleep,” the major said gruffly.
-
-“He don’t seem much interested in anything. Did ask if the mare showed
-up, though, when I stopped by to see him.” Tex swung into his saddle.
-
-“You let your feelings get the best of you,” the major said. It
-irritated him the way Tex stubbornly clung to his belief that Sam was
-innocent. “Besides, he came near killing a man,” the major added as
-though to clinch the argument.
-
-Tex said no more. The major was not his kind. He was really a stranger
-in the high country, and a good deal of a tenderfoot in many ways. Like
-Sam, Tex had lived all his life in the rough mountain country. The
-range boss had long since ceased trying to understand his employer.
-
-“I reckon he did plug that deputy,” he agreed. His manner and tone said
-plainly that he would have done the same thing.
-
-They rode on in silence. Tex drew himself into his shell and spoke only
-when he had to answer a question, but he kept thinking about the pile
-of bones. He thought of Sam too. The last time Tex visited the old
-fellow Sam had a strange look in his eyes. Tex could not forget that
-look; it haunted him. It was a homesick, lonesome look.
-
-
-
-
-10. Escape
-
-
-Midnight was never quite satisfied within the confining walls of his
-prison. There was plenty of fine grass, shade, and water, but the
-constant feeling that he was being held a prisoner irked him. He worked
-out a route around the outer limits of the meadow which gave him a
-chance to run. There was an open stretch along the high walls. From
-there he made a trail above the beaver lake through a pile of slide
-rock that had fallen from the cliff above. The trail swung to the lip
-of the canyon, following a crooked course until it curved back and
-around the lake again. Big rocks and fallen trees offered barriers.
-The little stallion soon learned to take these barriers in clean jumps
-which sent the blood pounding through him.
-
-The racing gave him an outlet for his energy, a chance to give play to
-his growing muscles. Snorting, shying, and whinnying shrilly he would
-race around and around, his mane and tail flying, his nostrils flaring.
-The exercise kept his body tough and hard. The blood of the chestnut
-stallion which flowed in his veins would not let him surrender to the
-peaceful existence offered by the sheltered meadow.
-
-Midsummer found the little horse rapidly growing into a big and
-powerful brute with a body which combined the slender legs, the
-intelligent head, and the great heart of Lady Ebony with the rugged
-strength of his father. His eyes betrayed the wild horse in him. They
-flashed white rims when he was excited or angry and he bared his teeth
-savagely when roused.
-
-One day Midnight heard sounds which excited him greatly. They came
-from the mesa above. He heard the pounding of many hoofs and above
-the nickering and snorting of mares rose the squeal of a stallion
-challenging the world defiantly. Midnight was resting in the shade of
-the aspen grove after a wild run around the meadow. He dashed out into
-the open and stood staring at the top of the canyon wall.
-
-As he stood there a horse appeared. A pinto filly stood with lowered
-head looking down into the canyon. She was a trim little mare with a
-lithe, slender body and a yellow mane and tail which flowed in the
-breeze. Midnight called to her eagerly and she turned her head to
-locate him. Her ears pricked forward as she answered his call with a
-quick eager whinny. Instantly wild excitement surged through the black.
-He raced back and forth, keeping in the open, looking up at the pinto
-as he danced and kicked.
-
-The little mare seemed to appreciate his efforts. She edged closer
-to the rim and nickered softly. The sound of her call sent Midnight
-leaping through the timber, pounding around the trail he had made. As
-he flashed into the sunlighted spaces below the rim he looked up to
-see her standing still, cut sharply against the sky, looking down at
-him. Again Midnight raced around his beaten pathway. As he flashed past
-the crevice which barred him from escape he halted and stared at the
-wide crack in the rock shelf. The trail beyond that fissure led to the
-little mare!
-
-Midnight backed away a few yards, lowered his head, and sniffed. He
-suddenly lost his fear of the deep gash in the earth. With a defiant
-squeal he charged straight at the gaping crack. His flying hoofs sent
-rocks sailing into the canyon below. As he charged down on the barrier
-he gathered his hard muscles under him for the long leap. Like a black
-meteor he shot through the air. Leaping over barriers along this race
-course had given Midnight needed training. His body arched as he
-hurtled into space above the crevice. His forefeet reached for the
-far ledge, landed and clung while he lashed with his hind feet in an
-attempt to pull himself to safety. For a moment he hung there, poised
-above the chasm, plunging and struggling, then he stumbled forward,
-safe on the ledge trail.
-
-Snorting and kicking, he pounded up the ledge until he came to the main
-trail leading out of Shadow Canyon. Doubling back along that trail
-he charged upward. With a clattering of loose stones he burst out on
-the edge of the meadow and halted to look for the pinto. The little
-mare had turned away from the rim. She stood looking at him, her neck
-arched, her mane blowing around her shoulders. She nickered and pawed
-at the grass tufts under her feet.
-
-Midnight plunged toward her, eager to make friends. When he was within
-a few yards of her she whirled and fled. Midnight raced after her,
-calling wildly. The pinto ran toward the band of mares feeding in the
-center of the mesa. Above them the chestnut stallion stood guard, his
-sleek coat gleaming in the sun, his massive head erect. His protruding
-eyes watched the pinto as she raced toward the mares with the black
-colt close behind her. Midnight’s speed was greater than that of the
-little mare and he was soon racing shoulder to shoulder with her.
-
-A scream of rage broke from the chestnut stallion. With ears laid back,
-nostrils flaring, he charged to meet Midnight. His teeth were bared
-and his eyes flamed. He meant to finish this young upstart at once.
-Midnight saw him coming and shoved over against the little mare,
-heading her away from the band. The boss of the herd came on at top
-speed. He was running at an angle to the course the two colts had taken.
-
-Midnight had no fear of the big stallion. He was so wildly glad to see
-a band of horses that he had no thought of battling any of them. The
-chestnut came on with terrific force. He struck Midnight a smashing
-blow which turned the colt halfway around and sent him staggering.
-Midnight twisted and fought to keep from going down. The chestnut
-reared and lashed out with his forefeet. His teeth reached for the
-colt’s shoulder and his scream rang across the meadow.
-
-As Midnight righted himself a terrible rage took him. He wanted to
-fight the big stallion, to smash him, to tear him. Swerving, he let the
-little mare dart into the band, then he whirled to meet the chestnut.
-The big stallion was eager for the kill. He had smashed young stallions
-before, driving them out of the band, and he expected to make short
-work of this fellow. Midnight answered the challenge by lunging to meet
-the leader’s second charge. The big stallion raised his heavy hoofs and
-met Midnight’s attack with smashing blows which battered the colt back.
-Pain brought a realization that the big stallion wanted to kill him
-just as the wolf pack had often tried. He dodged the next attack, but
-lunged in as the chestnut missed his target.
-
-His feint only half saved him. The chestnut’s teeth ripped his shoulder
-and a crushing blow staggered him. Midnight leaped away from the next
-charge, which came as soon as the big fellow could wheel about. The
-little black was outweighed and his strength was nothing compared with
-that of the chestnut. The band of mares watched without showing much
-excitement. The pinto stood in their midst, her ears well forward, her
-eyes rolling.
-
-When the chestnut charged again Midnight whirled and fled. He raced
-away down the meadow with the big stallion thundering after him. The
-chestnut was filled with savage eagerness. The victory was his and he
-meant to overtake this black stallion and kill him. But Midnight was
-the son of Lady Ebony, and had her fleetness. For a short distance he
-sprinted as fast as he could run and in that time discovered that he
-could easily outrun the big leader of the band. When he had satisfied
-himself of this he circled around the meadow whinnying defiantly and
-kicking up his heels.
-
-The chestnut was wild with savage rage. He thundered after the flying
-colt, but though he strained every muscle he could not overtake
-Midnight. Nor could he seem to outwind or tire him. The colt raced and
-dodged without seeming to feel the terrific pace. Around the mesa they
-raced, then around again. The chestnut began to tire. His breath was
-whistling from his nostrils and his flanks were streaked with lather.
-Suddenly he swerved and came to a halt beside the band of mares.
-Blowing and snorting he pawed defiantly, challenging Midnight to come
-and fight. Midnight halted and nickered eagerly to the pinto filly.
-
-The pinto answered his call. This angered the chestnut and he whirled
-to lunge at her. Before the little mare could leap aside, his big body
-smashed against her and his teeth sank deep into the fleshy part of
-her back. Squealing and kicking, the pinto sprawled on her side in
-the grass. The chestnut reared threateningly as she scrambled to her
-feet. With a squeal of fright the pinto darted out of the band and ran
-away across the mesa. The chestnut did not follow far. He was watching
-Midnight, fearing the black would try to steal some of his harem.
-
-Midnight leaped after the pinto. He soon overtook her and raced along
-beside her. The chestnut stallion was furious. He forgot the other
-mares and plunged after the colts. His speed was great enough to
-overtake the pinto, and he forced her back into the band. Midnight
-charged the big fellow and the chestnut whirled to give battle. The
-filly raced in among the mares and stood watching.
-
-The chestnut was eager to close with Midnight again. He lunged in and
-his weight sent Midnight staggering back. Then he lunged once more,
-before the black could get his balance. He landed squarely against
-Midnight’s shoulder and the colt went down. He rolled and lunged while
-massive hoofs pounded him and the chestnut’s teeth ripped gashes along
-his side. Finally Midnight staggered to his feet. He ducked drunkenly
-and saved himself from another smashing blow from the shoulder of the
-chestnut. Pain stabbed through his shoulder joint and hampered his
-speed as he tried to run away. The chestnut sensed that his victory was
-about to be complete. With squeals of triumph he charged on the colt.
-Midnight thought of the ledge trail where he had always found haven
-when wolves and cougars came. If he could reach that ledge he would
-make a stand.
-
-Desperately the little stallion plunged toward the castle rocks. The
-chestnut overtook him and smashed him aside, but Midnight dodged and
-raced on, not stopping to fight. Again the chestnut smashed him, his
-teeth ripping gashes across Midnight’s rump. The black staggered and
-weaved under the terrible battering but he kept going. He reached the
-ledge and plunged upward with the chestnut slashing at his back, trying
-to smash him to the ground where he could finish the fight.
-
-Midnight tried to whirl about on the ledge. He suddenly realized that
-if the big fellow got him trapped in the shelter at the end of the
-trail the chestnut would kill him. He managed to turn around and face
-the charging leader of the band. They smashed together and Midnight
-went down, sprawling and kicking on the narrow ledge. He rolled over
-and his hoofs slid over the rim. In a moment he was sliding down over
-the edge.
-
-Screaming and pawing, the chestnut glared over the rim. He saw his
-adversary land on a shelf below and stagger slowly to his feet. The big
-stallion raced up and down the trail but saw no way to reach the colt
-below.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The spot where Midnight landed was only a few yards below the place
-where he had landed when the silvertip shoved him over the edge. He got
-to his feet panting and blowing. For a long time he stood trembling,
-favoring his pain-raked shoulder. Then with a squeal of defiance he
-hobbled along the ledge and down to the little meadow where he had
-lived before the band came to the mesa. He was eager to cross the
-crevice again and join the horses above, but when he reached the aspen
-grove he halted to ease the pains shooting through his shoulder. After
-a bit he moved on. He halted at the edge of the crevice and stood
-listening. He did not try to leap across the narrow chasm, he would
-have to wait until the pain left his shoulder. Above he could hear the
-triumphant snorting and calling of the chestnut stallion. Slowly he
-turned and walked back to the aspen grove. After a time he lay down on
-a bed of dead leaves and grass.
-
-He lay still and listened. From the mesa came the sounds of the feeding
-herd. For a time the chestnut pranced about nickering and snorting.
-The mares fed eagerly, not paying any attention to him, except when he
-came close to one of them. The ears of the little horse in the aspen
-grove followed every sound intently. He snorted and struggled painfully
-to his feet when the chestnut blasted a warning to the mares. There
-was a rolling thunder of hoofs as the wild band charged across the
-mesa and into the timber. Midnight tried to race to the crevice but at
-the first step he stumbled and almost fell. Slowly he hobbled to the
-edge where he stood shaking his head and calling loudly. The rhythm
-of the pounding hoofs died away quickly and Midnight was alone again.
-He turned back and hobbled at a slow walk toward his bed in the aspen
-grove.
-
-In the days which followed Midnight listened for the sound of racing
-hoofs and the whinny of the band, but the big stallion did not lead the
-mares back to the high mesa. He ranged far up on the side of the Crazy
-Kills where the trails were steep and broken and the meadows small and
-surrounded by dense cover. In the barrens close to timber line few
-cattle ranged and none of Major Howard’s riders cared to make the steep
-climb, knowing the stray cows that climbed up that high would come down
-long before roundup time.
-
-Midnight dropped into his former way of living. As soon as his shoulder
-became sound he began making his usual rounds of the little race
-course. And many times he charged to the edge of the crevice where he
-would slide to a halt and stand snorting and shaking his head. His leg
-was still stiff, too stiff for so long a jump, and he did not have the
-nearness of mares to fill him with wild excitement. He did not forget
-the wild band and the pinto filly, but his wild desire for freedom was
-not hot and driving. His body filled out and his legs and chest took on
-a ruggedness which made him lose the coltish look.
-
-The old beavers increased their efforts. Helped by a brood of
-youngsters, they cut trees and peeled bark from early morning until
-late at night. They had long since ceased to worry about being about by
-daylight. The seclusion of the little meadow had changed their habits a
-great deal. Their storehouses were bulging but they worked feverishly
-anyway, as though they were facing a famine period. And they built
-houses over the land openings where their runways came to the surface
-of the meadow, tall piles of mud and sticks, laced together and padded
-down into a tough, warm masonry which would keep out the biting frosts
-of winter. Midnight watched them lazily. He could not know they were
-expecting another hard winter. But he did have an uneasy feeling when
-the first frosts came. The wild strain in his blood stirred and he
-would have left the high country had he been free to go. One morning he
-trotted to the edge of the meadow and found it white with glistening
-frost. The white carpet disturbed him. He rushed to the edge of the
-crevice and stood there snorting and pawing. But he did not try the
-long jump.
-
-The frosts deepened. The aspen leaves swirled down to cover the roots,
-the bulbs and the seeds bedded under the soft loam. The grass turned
-brown and the big spruce trees standing close to the wall moaned as a
-cold wind swept down from the new snow fields high on the barren peaks
-of the Crazy Kills. The haze of an Indian summer day was swept away by
-the first snow of winter and again the world turned white and the air
-became snapping cold. Midnight put on his heavy robe of shaggy hair
-which turned the sharp blasts whirling downward.
-
-The snow deepened and Midnight dug for grass. He moved his bedground to
-a needle-padded spot under a giant spruce where the snow never fell.
-Now he was interested only in a battle to keep his belly filled. He was
-still growing and his body demanded food for new muscles and sinews as
-well as for warmth. The storms came and the snow on the meadow became
-deeper and deeper. The mesa above was lashed by bitter winds but the
-sheltered meadow did not feel their lash. On its surface the snow
-settled down in loose, deep smoothness which formed a warm blanket for
-the grass and the flowers. Great drifts formed along the rim above,
-fanned out by the wind and the drifting snow on the upper bench. Their
-white lips thrust far out over the edge of the canyon like the rounded
-curves of giant mushrooms.
-
-One moonlit night as Midnight lay on his dry bed of needles he heard
-a strange sound and felt the earth tremble under him. The sound came
-from the rim above. He peered upward but could see nothing except the
-protruding snowbanks and the gleaming whiteness of the world outside
-his shelter. The sound was a deep, grating rumble that reminded him
-of distant thunder. One of the overhanging lips of snow had broken
-under the great weight of tons of snow and had settled down. For a
-few minutes it moved slowly, grinding rocks off the wall, settling,
-sliding, packing the snow into ice. Then its speed increased and the
-dull rumble broke into a terrible roar as thousands of tons of snow
-shot downward. Midnight leaped to his feet and trembled as he watched.
-
-The mass of snow plunged and boiled as it shot downward. It seethed
-around a stand of spruce. The big trees, many of them several feet
-through at the butt, jerked and swayed like saplings, then went down
-to be swallowed up by the maelstrom of ice and snow. Boulders were
-torn from their beds and from the face of the cliff. They were ground
-to sand in the maw of the slide. The whole cataract became dirty gray
-in color. Its roar shook the mesa as it poured into Shadow Canyon.
-A startled snowshoe rabbit, routed from his bed under a fallen log,
-leaped into the air, plunged forward, then bounced high as the dirty
-mass caught him. For a moment he hung above the seething mass, then
-dropped into it and vanished, ground to nothingness.
-
-The slide struck the lower end of the little mesa. It shot into the
-deep crevice, filling it full, then boiling over to roll on down into
-the main canyon. It cut a swath through the spruces and aspens growing
-on the steep slope of the big gulch. The timber went down like grass
-before the bar of a mowing machine.
-
-The white death was only a few seconds in passing but it struck fear
-into the heart of the black stallion. He snorted and pawed excitedly.
-And he was not alone in his fear. Up on the high mesa the old
-timber-line buck, who had returned to his feed grounds, leaped from his
-bed under a spruce. He stood staring out into the white world, rigid,
-shaking his heavy antlers and grunting. Every wild creature within
-hearing stopped and listened, tense, ready to break and run. They all
-knew the terror of the white death and each knew that to try to dash
-away would be useless because of the terrible speed and the uncertainty
-of the course it would take. They would try to run if it came hurtling
-upon them, but until they saw it they did not move. It was an hour
-before Midnight bedded down again.
-
-In the morning the colt plowed his way to his feed ground near the
-beaver lake. He stood for a time staring at the spot where the crevice
-had been. The deep fissure was filled with dirty snow, yellow,
-resin-oozing timbers, torn and ripped apart, and broken boulders. It
-was packed as hard as the frozen surface of a lake. Carefully Midnight
-ventured out on it and found it solid. His weight did not make it
-settle at all.
-
-He worked his way step by step across the dirty snow, then headed up
-the trail leading to the meadow. The snow was so deep he had to plunge,
-rising on his forefeet and lunging. When he rested the snow pressed
-close against his sides. Coming out on top he halted to look out across
-the meadow. A sharp, icy wind cut at him and loose snow swirled around
-his legs. He saw the old timber-line buck digging for weeds near the
-timber. Midnight whinnied eagerly and plunged toward the ancient one.
-The old buck jerked up his head and watched Midnight as he floundered
-across the mesa. They met and stood staring at each other for some
-time. Finally the buck turned his back and began digging again.
-Midnight set to work pawing for grass.
-
-Bitter winds swept across the meadow and cut through Midnight’s shaggy
-coat. Snow swirled before the wind and piled into deep drifts. The mesa
-was more bleak and icy than the little meadow under the rim. And the
-grass was not so good when it was uncovered. But the black stallion
-had companionship of a sort. He worked busily all that day to fill his
-belly with grass. At dusk he headed toward his haven under the rim.
-Darkness settled before he reached the canyon trail and the moonlight
-gleamed on the snow. Midnight was tired when he reached his dry bed
-under the big spruce.
-
-After that he stayed on the bench under the rim. It was warmer down
-under the wall and the grass was easier to get. He could dig without
-much effort. Now that he knew he could leave the little mesa whenever
-he chose he did not want to go.
-
-Up on the high mesa the old buck was finding life hard. He had no help
-in digging for food and his legs were stiff, with a tightness he had
-never felt before. Age was slowing the spring in his powerful muscles.
-His horns still held patches of velvet. The patches clung in dry, furry
-spots on his polished lances. The old buck had not had the energy to
-polish them and scrub them as he should have. Midnight did not know
-that he had deserted his friend at a time when the ancient monarch
-needed him badly.
-
-Late one afternoon the black stallion was startled by a familiar cry.
-A pack of lobo wolves had swept out of the spruce at the edge of the
-meadow above. Their cry came when they sighted the old timber-line
-buck, and the cry was the cry of the kill. Midnight plunged to his
-shelter under the big spruce and stood there tossing his black mane.
-His eyes rolled white and he snorted savagely.
-
-Up on the mesa the old buck had whirled about to dash for the safety of
-the timber and the castle rocks. He had ample time to escape and should
-have outdistanced his pursuers, but his stiffened legs refused to lift
-with the smooth power he had always possessed. Before he was halfway to
-cover the pack was leaping around him, their yellow eyes flaming, their
-red tongues jerking over white fangs.
-
-There on the flat mesa the old monarch made his last stand. With
-sweeping, thrusting antlers he met the leaping attack of the gray
-killers. They darted and lunged and dodged around him, keeping up a
-mad chorus of yelping and snarling. The old buck could not guard his
-vital parts against all the wolves. One after another they slid under
-his frantic, thrusting antlers to rip gashes in his flanks and legs.
-Snorting and blowing savagely he fought with horns and lashing hoofs.
-
-The wolves knew they would win and they kept up their ripping, tearing
-tactics, never fastening on the big fellow long enough for his sharp
-hoofs to strike them. Weakened by the loss of blood, staggering as
-each new wound opened, the old fellow fought his way stubbornly toward
-the timber. Every foot of his retreating trail was marked by bloody,
-trampled snow.
-
-One of the wolves, taking advantage of the slowing thrusts of the
-old buck’s antlers, dodged in and slashed the tendons of a hind leg.
-Slowly, with antlers still lashing, the old monarch settled down into
-the snow and lay beating with his forelegs and jerking his head.
-Instantly every wolf was on him and their howls were more savage than
-before.
-
-The end of the monarch was the destined end of all wild dwellers. The
-end of a life of struggle and constant alertness. The law of the wild
-was fulfilled. While youth and vigor gave him power and speed the buck
-lived and went his way, but when that strength slipped from him he went
-down before the gray killers.
-
-Under the big spruce Midnight stood listening to the growling and
-snarling of the pack as they tore the warm flesh from the bones of the
-old buck. He watched and waited, expecting the pack to come leaping
-down the ledge trail and across the slide-filled fissure. But they did
-not scent him because the wind always blew off the high mesa and seldom
-came up out of the canyon except in the spring. When the killers had
-stripped the bones and cracked the ones their powerful jaws could break
-they left the mangled carcass and raced away through the moonlight,
-seeking another victim.
-
-Then the little fox came out of his den and a pair of coyotes trotted
-up from the shadows under the spruce at the lower end of the mesa. The
-little fox and the coyotes fought over the bones, dragging them away to
-spots where they could lie down and gnaw them or crack them and lick
-the still warm marrow fat from their centers.
-
-
-
-
-11. New Trails
-
-
-Spring came with a chinook and a sudden thaw which broke a week of
-bitter weather. The transformation was in the nature of a miracle.
-Soft breezes blew up from the valleys, warm winds which settled the
-snow and filled it with water. Midnight smelled the earthiness of the
-wind from the lowlands and pranced eagerly. A change as sudden as the
-change in the weather had come over him. For months he had given all
-his attention to the gnawing hunger which was always demanding more dry
-grass; now he was stirred by another urge. He wanted to be free to run,
-to seek something he did not understand.
-
-Shaking his head he galloped through the slush and mud to the ledge
-trail. The dirty ice filling the crevice had not settled. The force of
-the slide had packed it so hard that it melted only a little on the
-surface. Midnight walked across the fissure and up the ledge trail.
-He stood on the edge of the meadow and looked across its gleaming
-surface. With an eager nicker he plowed through the wet snow. The old
-timber-line buck was not there to greet him and the only answer to his
-call was the harsh and irritated chatter of a crested jay in the timber.
-
-Midnight moved out on the mesa and began pawing for grass. He was
-hungry and now that he was in the open he did not know what he desired
-or where he wanted to go, so he set to feeding. After a time he moved
-down beside the castle rocks and stood staring into the smoky haze of
-the valley country.
-
-Toward evening he went to the castle rocks and climbed up to the
-shelter he had shared with Lady Ebony. He sniffed about, pawing and
-snorting as he smelled cougar scent. The cat smell mingled with the
-pungent odor coming from the pack rat’s nest in the corner. The cat
-smell was cold but it stirred him to uneasy anger. He tore to bits the
-bed of sticks where the king cat had slept, scattering them about on
-the rocky floor.
-
-That night the cold came again and the slushy snow froze into a coating
-of ice. In the morning the meadow was locked under a thick rust of icy
-armor and Midnight was forced to work hard to get a meal. For several
-weeks he battled to keep his stomach filled. But with the passing of
-each day the air grew warmer and softer, the snow settled, and bare
-spots began to appear. Midnight was able again to eat his fill. He
-raced around the meadow giving play to his powerful muscles. He was big
-and strong; another season would see him a magnificent black stallion.
-
-As the snow line crept back into the timber to make its last stand in
-the shadows under the spruce, the buds on the trees burst and the first
-flowers shoved their heads out of the ground. Green shoots pushed up
-through the dead grass. Their lush juices tantalized the black horse.
-He could not get enough of them, yet he could not let them alone. His
-efforts always ended by his eating a great deal of the cured grass in
-order to fill his belly.
-
-The bears came ambling across the meadow in pairs and singly to slide
-down the leaning spruce for their spring meeting before the flowering
-of their love moon. The wolves ran under the spring stars or howled
-on barren ridges. Midnight did not pay much attention to the gray
-killers. He had come to know by their howls when they were hunting and
-when they were serenading. The old tom cougars stalked through the
-timber while the she-cats sought them out, which is the way of the big
-cats. And the little folk left their winter dens to race about in the
-warm sunshine. The yellowbelly whistlers blasted their shrill warning
-from the sentinel stone while the calico chips and the rockchips
-stayed within the protected area where they could pay attention to the
-warnings given by the whistlers. The hawks circled in the blue above,
-billowing with the gusts of spring wind, while the eagles circled high
-above them in the still upper air. One day the chipmunks came out and
-the meadow rang with their chock-chock song as they celebrated their
-awakening.
-
-In all this celebrating and excitement the cabin at the edge of the
-meadow stood silent and disconsolate, dead and lifeless. It seemed
-older and more weathered than before. The weeds on its dirt roof did
-not break into green foliage as soon as those in the meadow. One of
-the eaves boards had given way, letting the dirt covering slip from a
-corner of the roof and exposing the split slabs beneath. The spring
-showers made little gullies and seams which looked like wrinkles. At
-the door the willow chair lay on its side, tipped over by the snow or
-some inquisitive visitor who recognized that the man smell was long
-cold and dead.
-
-Midnight visited the cabin often, smelling about. He used its rough log
-corners as a scratching post against which he leaned and rubbed while
-he grunted with pleasure. The rubbing loosened mats of hair from his
-sides and soon his coat was sleek and shining, new as the blue flowers
-crowding the shady spots at the edge of the timber. As spring advanced
-Midnight became more nervous. He ran more often and for longer at a
-time, sometimes circling the meadow several times before halting to paw
-restlessly. He did not leave the meadow but he was always listening and
-often paused to call shrilly.
-
-Down on the desert the chestnut stallion and his band had met with an
-ordeal unusual for them. There had been only light snows all winter
-and the spring rains had been so light they did not settle the dust
-or harden the sand. The grass was short and poor in quality. The big
-stallion had trouble forcing the mares to do as he wished. The wise
-old ones knew that there was grass and water in the mountains and were
-determined to head that way. Finally the chestnut gave in and led them
-toward the Crazy Kill Range. They worked their way quickly through the
-foothills where cowboys were shoving white-faced cattle out on the
-spring range. The mares would gladly have stayed to feed and put some
-fat on their lank frames in the low country where the grass was growing
-lustily, but the chestnut drove them higher, toward the bleak meadows
-under timber line where the riders would not come.
-
-One morning the band arrived at the high mesa overlooking Shadow
-Canyon. The mares and colts came up the narrow trail first, with the
-chestnut bringing up the rear. When they broke from the canyon they
-spread out and began feeding. The pinto filly was the second one to
-reach the mesa. She was stronger and tougher than any of the other
-mares and had stood the winter better.
-
-Midnight was resting in the timber close above the clearing by the
-cabin when the pinto and her mother walked out into the tall grass. He
-plunged to his feet and whinnied loudly. The mare halted and looked
-at him without answering his call, but the pinto tossed her head and
-nickered eagerly. With a flash of her heels she trotted to meet him.
-Midnight charged across the grass and slid to a halt beside her. The
-pinto pivoted and lashed out at him with her trim heels. Midnight
-dodged and the filly headed across the meadow with the black swinging
-along at her side. They raced the full length of the mesa and back
-again, to halt at the base of the castle rocks where they stood,
-snorting and prancing.
-
-Their second run took them charging through the band of mares spread
-out on the meadow. The scrawny colts in the band bounced after the
-fleeting racers until they were outdistanced while the mares watched
-without interest. Just at that moment they were far too busy pulling
-grass to care about this black stallion.
-
-The chestnut trotted out on the meadow and stood looking about for
-danger signs. He sighted the black and the pinto racing across the
-grass and his eyes rolled, his ears flattened, and he blasted a savage
-challenge.
-
-Midnight and the pinto whirled and were standing on high ground at the
-upper end of the mesa. The pinto tossed her head and leaped away toward
-the mares as she saw the lord of the herd charging toward her. Midnight
-sent his own challenge ringing across the meadow as he leaped to meet
-the big stallion. His feelings were much different than they had been
-at their first meeting. Now he was eager to accept the challenge to
-battle, and savage rage, as great as the rage of the chestnut, filled
-him. He had his father’s fighting blood in his veins.
-
-The two stallions crashed together and the greater weight and power of
-the chestnut sent Midnight staggering back. He was not yet so rugged
-and heavy as his father. He recovered his balance and reared with teeth
-bared and hoofs pounding. The master of the band raised his massive
-hoofs and struck back as he reached for Midnight’s neck with his teeth.
-The two stood like boxers, hammering away at each other. Again Midnight
-was pounded back.
-
-The chestnut had only one idea in his head and that was to smash this
-black stallion who had dared challenge his mastery. It would not have
-mattered had he known that Midnight was his son. He was sure he would
-soon end the career of the black; he knew his advantage and rushed upon
-the colt with savage eagerness.
-
-Midnight met the next charge and was hammered back once more, giving
-ground slowly as the heavy hoofs pounded him and the bared teeth ripped
-tufts of hair from his shoulders and neck. Slowly the chestnut pushed
-him toward the rim of the canyon. But Midnight refused to turn tail and
-run. This time he had a different urge to keep him fighting. He was
-not a lonesome colt seeking companionship, he was a stallion desiring
-the rightful place of a leader. He could easily have outdistanced
-the chestnut had he chosen to flee, but he was filled with hot rage.
-He had a wild desire to kill the big stallion who was battering him.
-Slowly he gave ground, moving down the gentle slope of the mesa toward
-the rocky edge of the canyon. Behind him the walls of Shadow Canyon
-dropped away in a sheer face a hundred feet in height. There was no
-brush-padded ledge close under the rim at that point, but the black
-paid no attention to the danger.
-
-Foot by foot the two moved down the slope. Blood spurted from wounds on
-shoulders and necks. The smell of it increased the fury of the battling
-stallions. Their savage screams rang through the spruce timber and
-echoed back from the walls of the castle rocks.
-
-The chestnut reared and plunged, eager to smash his antagonist to the
-ground. Midnight met the smashing charge with counterblows, but he
-was driven backward though he remained on his feet. A red wound gaped
-on his chest and blood trickled down across the white splash on his
-forehead but his fury was so great that he did not feel the pain. His
-hind feet struck solid rock and stones flew into the canyon behind
-him. He was poised on the very edge of the chasm. Then he saw his
-danger, as he shifted sidewise to dodge the blows of the big stallion.
-His hind feet were planted inches from the rim as he reared to meet
-another attack. The chestnut was blind with fury, he did not see the
-sheer drop ahead. With a terrible scream he lunged.
-
-Midnight had met every charge squarely, desiring only to match blows
-with his foe, but the dizzy space under his feet made him suddenly
-change his tactics. He leaped aside to avoid being shoved over the
-edge. The chestnut’s lunge carried him forward like an avalanche. Too
-late he saw the rim and the empty space ahead. Plunging and sliding he
-shot toward the abyss. Midnight’s rump was toward him and close. With
-a shrill cry the black lashed out with his hind feet. His hoofs landed
-against the side of the struggling stallion poised on the dizzy height.
-The chestnut might have saved himself but for that hail of blows. With
-a defiant, savage squeal he plunged into space.
-
-Midnight whirled about and stood with lowered head, hot breath
-whistling through his flaring nostrils, his eyes rolling so that their
-white rims gleamed in the morning sunlight. He watched the body of the
-chestnut turn over and over in the air as it shot down to land in a
-mangled heap on a pile of rocks. Stamping and snorting he waited for
-the chestnut to get to his feet and start back to finish the battle.
-The chestnut did not move, but lay, a mangled heap of broken bones
-and twisted muscles at the foot of the cliff. Midnight challenged his
-adversary many times as he stood there on the high rim. When he got
-no reply he turned toward the mares who had not stopped their eager
-feeding. The pinto nickered eagerly and left her grass pulling to trot
-toward him. The mares lifted their heads for a moment as he came
-closer. Midnight trotted to them, dancing as he approached.
-
-With the pinto beside him he raced once around the meadow, then the two
-joined the mares. Midnight was too excited to start feeding. He walked
-around sniffing at the colts, edging up to the mares. The old ones laid
-back their ears and warned him to keep his distance. When he tried to
-nose one of their colts they humped their backs warningly. But they
-accepted him as the master of the band and waited for him to assert
-himself in the savage and harsh manner to which they were accustomed.
-But Midnight lacked much in leadership. He really wanted to be a member
-of the band and not a leader. He wanted to play with the pinto filly.
-His rage had cooled and with it had gone much of the strange power
-he had felt while battling the chestnut stallion. The pinto did not
-understand why she was interested in Midnight but she stayed close to
-his side and divided her attention between him and the lush grass.
-
-Toward evening the mares became restless. They were used to seeking
-cover before night fell. One old mare moved away from the band. She
-had decided that this new leader was not going to seek a safe retreat.
-She shook her head, then moved into the timber. The others followed
-her with Midnight and the pinto coming along behind, nipping at each
-other and making a great show of kicking their heels and lashing at
-each other. And the old mare changed the course the chestnut had so
-insistently followed. She headed across the ridge and down into a deep
-valley.
-
-The mares followed their new leader. They expected the chestnut
-stallion to come charging through the woods after them to drive them
-back toward the high ridges, but they did not want to go higher and did
-not intend to head that way until he came.
-
-The moon swung up over a spruce ridge and flooded the valley with white
-light. The wise old mare selected a sheltered little meadow for a
-stopping place. It was small and the band of thirty horses had to crowd
-close together, but it smallness offered protection against cougars and
-wolves. The cunning and harsh leadership of the chestnut stallion had
-taken much of the natural wariness away from the mares. They had always
-depended on him to guide them.
-
-Late that night Midnight had his first chance to take his place as
-protector and lord of the band. The mares and the colts had bedded
-down. Midnight and the pinto had raced around the clearing and come
-to a halt on a wooded knoll overlooking the meadow. They stood close
-together, snorting and pawing and playing. They pretended to see forms
-in the black shadows under the spruce. While they were standing there
-a lank cougar passed below the high point. His nose wrinkled and his
-long, black-tipped tail lashed as he scented the mares and colts
-sleeping in the open.
-
-Circling to windward the yellow killer crept to the edge of the meadow.
-He was looking for the sentinel he expected to find on guard over
-the band. When he saw no guard he snarled softly and his yellow eyes
-flamed. He peered intently at the bedded horses and his eyes fastened
-on a colt standing close to his mother who was lying in a deep hollow.
-The colt’s head was down and his furry rump was toward the king cat.
-
-Silently, like a tawny shadow, the cat slid through the grass toward
-the unsuspecting colt. When he was within striking distance he drew
-his powerful legs under him and flattened his head between his massive
-forepaws. His long claws moved slowly in and out, sheathing and
-unsheathing their sharp points; his lips pulled away from his fangs.
-
-Up on the knoll Midnight was dancing on his hind legs, his ears back,
-his bared teeth reaching to nip at the neck of the pinto. She whirled
-and lashed out at him with her slender feet. Midnight dodged the blows
-and crowded against her, shoving her roughly to one side. She laid back
-her ears and sunk her teeth into the loose skin of his shoulder.
-
-The pain angered Midnight and he whirled to teach her a lesson. His
-lunge was halted as the savage scream of the cougar cracked the
-stillness. His forefeet struck the ground with a thud and he stood
-beside the pinto, staring toward the mares. The frightened whinny of a
-colt mingled with the cry of the big cat. That cry from the stricken
-colt sent a surging rush of rage through Midnight. He plunged straight
-down the slope toward the spot where the cat had made his attack. In
-the meadow the mares had lurched to their feet and were snorting and
-milling about. With a ringing call the black stallion charged to the
-rescue.
-
-The cougar had landed on the colt’s back, striking him down instantly.
-The little fellow was dead in a moment. Standing on the limp body of
-his victim, the yellow killer faced the angry mares who plunged around
-him. Midnight charged through the circle and leaped at the killer, his
-ears laid back, his battle cry ringing. This was something the cougar
-had not expected. He had decided there was no stallion with the band.
-Now he arched his back and reared to meet Midnight. He lashed out at
-the black as he came in.
-
-The cougar stayed a minute too long in facing the enraged Midnight. He
-expected the stallion to swerve and rush past, but Midnight did not
-swerve. He lifted his forefeet and struck straight into the face of
-the killer. His smashing hoofs descended on the head and shoulders of
-the king cat. The blows sent the cat rolling and tumbling over and
-over on the grass. Instantly the mares joined the attack. Once a leader
-had braved the terrible fangs and claws of the cat they were ready to
-finish the job.
-
-Screaming and rolling, the cougar tried to escape, to get to his feet
-and leap clear of the smashing hoofs, but the hoofs beat him down and
-trampled him. Teeth tore at him as he twisted and lashed. His claws and
-teeth were poor protection against the sharp hoofs of the horses. He
-was battered back on the grass each time he tried to get his feet under
-him. In a minute’s time he was a bloody pulp and the mares had backed
-away. They stood in a circle around him, their nostrils flaring, their
-eyes rolling.
-
-Midnight danced about snorting and blowing excitedly. He was aware
-again of his power and was beginning to understand the job he had taken
-over from the chestnut. The mares stood waiting for him to decide what
-should be done. When he did not offer to lead them away from the scene
-of the kill an old mare struck out and the others followed except the
-mother whose colt was dead. She stood over him nickering and calling,
-trying to get him to his feet.
-
-The pinto went with the mares. She had been badly frightened by the
-attack and wanted to stay close beside her mother. Midnight trotted
-after the band and stood by while they bedded down in another meadow
-near the scene of the attack. He walked around sniffing and snorting,
-expecting another cougar to come out of the night. When nothing
-happened, he lay down for a few hours’ rest just before dawn. One of
-the old mares at once got up and set to feeding apart from the herd.
-She seemed to sense that Midnight had much to learn about leadership.
-
-The next day the band fed in the meadow until the old mare decided they
-should move on. Midnight did not offer to lead them, so she struck
-out. They headed deeper into the lush grass country. They passed many
-white-faced cows and yearling steers. Occasionally a lordly bull would
-saunter out of the shade to watch them. The band had invaded Major
-Howard’s finest grass belt. They did not know the danger this would
-bring, all they thought of was the fine grass and the plentiful supply
-of water in the clear, rushing streams. There was aspen shade for the
-middle of the day and there was spruce timber for shelter from the
-sudden and violent thunderstorms with their cold rain.
-
-The band soon forgot the chestnut stallion. Midnight was an easy
-master. He let them wander where they wished. But he was a fierce and
-terrible fighter when roused. They accepted him without much concern,
-giving way to his few demands.
-
-The thunderstorms seldom lasted over half an hour and the spruce
-needles shed the rain. Midnight was happy in the easy life. The pinto
-played with him, racing over the grass in the mornings or at dusk. She
-did what he demanded without making any demands of her own. And now
-Midnight had begun to watch for enemies while the herd fed. He was
-slowly learning what was expected of him.
-
-
-
-
-12. Doom of the Band
-
-
-Tex dropped the saddle he was dragging across the yard. He faced Major
-Howard, his lean face expressionless. The major was out of sorts that
-morning and when he was in such a mood he was short-spoken. In his
-irritation he did not notice that Tex was not in a jovial frame of mind
-either.
-
-“The boys tell me there’s a band of thirty wild horses down on the
-aspen range. I want you to take a crew up there and clean them out.” He
-added as an after-thought, “Use rifles and make sure none of them get
-away.”
-
-Tex scowled. He was dead set against shooting any sort of horse, even a
-scrub.
-
-“Why not round ’em up and sell ’em?” he asked.
-
-The major grunted disgustedly. He could never understand the quirks in
-the nature of his range boss. Tex knew the wild horses were worthless
-on the market. They would be tough and mean to handle, half of them
-never could be broken, and they would not bring ten dollars a head. To
-the major this was a simple matter of business. Tex did not object to
-raising fine cattle for slaughtering, therefore he should not object to
-killing a few head of worthless horses. The major spoke impatiently.
-
-“You know it would cost more to corral and handle that bunch than we
-could get out of them,” he snapped. “Kill them all. While I had more
-open range than I could use I wasn’t so particular, but I’ve just
-bought two big herds of whitefaces. It will take every foot of grass
-I own to run them.” The major noticed that Tex was not convinced. He
-added more quietly, “This is business, big business.”
-
-“I reckon so,” Tex answered as he reached down and caught the horn of
-his saddle.
-
-The major was ruffled by Tex’s reply.
-
-“If you don’t want to handle this job I’ll get another man to take
-charge of it.”
-
-“I’ll handle it,” Tex said grimly. Then he added almost to himself, “I
-thought that chestnut stud was the smartest hoss on the range. Never
-figured he’d trail his herd down into cow country where the boys ride
-regular.”
-
-“Well, he has and I want that scrub stuff killed,” the major answered.
-
-Tex dragged his saddle into the corral and whistled to his bay gelding.
-The bay trotted to meet him and Tex let his mouth relax into a grin as
-he patted the big fellow’s neck.
-
-“I reckon we’ll have to do the dirty work,” he said softly.
-
-Tex picked four men to go with him, men who could handle saddle
-carbines expertly. He did not want any careless shooting. The kills
-would have to be clean. When he explained the major’s orders to the
-men they growled but none of them refused to go. They all shared Tex’s
-dislike for the job, but they would carry out the boss’s orders.
-
-The execution crew rode away from the ranch with thirty-thirty rifles
-slapping under their stirrup flaps. The boys who had reported to the
-major had given the location of the herd. Tex did not expect to find
-the band where the boys had seen them, but by riding to that meadow
-they could pick up the trail. Thirty horses would leave plenty of
-tracks.
-
-Tex speculated gloomily on the foolish turn the habits of the wild band
-had taken. The big stallion at their head must have lost his cunning or
-else he had met with disaster and a younger leader had taken his place.
-
-Silently the men rode through the timber and up the long ridges leading
-out of the lower valley. They entered the aspen belt and took a trail
-which ran along the top of a rocky ridge. From that ridge they crossed
-over to another and finally followed a red-granite cliff wall which
-led them into a narrow meadow. Towering rims of granite formed a half
-circle around the meadow with scattered spruce close to the wall on
-the lower side where the meadow broke off into the lower country. The
-entrance to the narrow valley was grown over by a stand of young aspen
-trees. Tex hoped to pick up the trail of the herd in this meadow and
-follow it from there. He halted his men in the dense cover and scowled
-across the meadow.
-
-At the upper end fed the band of wild horses he sought. They had not
-moved their feed ground since the boys had first located them. Tex
-was disgusted with them; they were acting like brood mares in a farm
-pasture.
-
-“The chestnut stud isn’t running that bunch,” he said gruffly.
-
-The men nodded agreement and Shorty Spears, horse-breaker for the
-ranch, spoke up.
-
-“Must be an old mare at the head of that herd. This is just the spot an
-old biddie would pick, grass knee-high, water close in.”
-
-Tex nodded. He was studying the band carefully. Finally he gave his
-orders.
-
-“Two of you take the upper side along the wall. Keep in the brush cover
-until you work your way down close to them. Make clean jobs, no gut
-shooting or broken legs. Shorty, you and Cal take the lower side along
-the rim. They won’t break down over that wall. I’ll wait here in the
-outlet and pick off any that break past you boys. They have to come out
-this way. Now get going.”
-
-The men divided forces and rode away. They were eager to get a bad job
-done. It would be no sport for them, shooting down a band of mares
-and colts. The horses were trapped and would be helpless before the
-repeating rifles. Tex watched them go. He noted grimly that even the
-wind was against the wild horses. They had no sentinel posted and Tex
-could spot no stallion among them. The execution should be quick and
-complete.
-
-Midnight fed beside the pinto filly. They had just finished a race
-around the meadow and were standing in a clump of young spruce and
-balsam looking down over the lower valleys. The rim at their feet broke
-off steeply. It was matted with brush; ragged rocks jutted up through
-the green leaves. The black stallion was nervous and uneasy, though he
-did not know why. He had a feeling of confinement, similar to that he
-had felt while he was a prisoner on the meadow below the high mesa. He
-tossed his head and pawed, snorting impatiently. He was making ready to
-drive the band out of the closed meadow.
-
-With a sharp nicker he whirled and laid his ears back. The pinto edged
-away from him. With mane flaring and tail flowing around her heels she
-kicked high into the air and dashed away toward the mares. Midnight
-charged after her, sending his warning call ringing across the meadow.
-The mares jerked up their heads and stared at him, then looked around
-uneasily to see what had startled him. When they saw nothing they fell
-to feeding again. They had no intention of leaving this horse heaven
-until they were driven out, and their experience with Midnight did not
-make them leap into action the way a command from the chestnut would
-have acted on them. This meadow was a safe retreat from cougars and
-wolves. No killer could slip up on them with the steep rim on one side
-and the high walls on the other.
-
-Reaching the first mare, Midnight rushed at her, and when she did not
-leap away he fastened his bare teeth on her rump. The mare squealed in
-pain and surprise. Humping her back and bucking up and down she fled
-before his lashing attack. Midnight rushed at another and sent her
-staggering as his powerful chest smashed into her. It had taken him
-days to get worked up to this nervous and panicky pitch, but he was
-roused now and meant to drive the band out of the meadow.
-
-He was swinging around the band, slashing at the mares with his teeth
-or crashing into them to get them to hurry when the silence of the
-valley was shattered by two crashing reports from near the base of the
-cliff. An old mare near Midnight staggered, turned halfway around,
-then sank to the grass without making a sound. Another mare plunged
-into the air and slid on her side until she came to rest in a grassy
-hollow, her legs beating the air in jerky spasms. The two shots did
-more to snap life and action into the band than Midnight had been able
-to accomplish. The mares charged wildly toward the aspen grove which
-marked the outlet to the trap. Mothers crowded colts along as fast as
-the little ones could run. The spitting and crashing of rifles echoed
-along the canyon wall and mares plunged into the grass mortally wounded
-at every leap the band took. A cloud of dust rolled up behind the
-charging band and in that cloud of dust Midnight ripped and lashed as
-he drove the wild ones on.
-
-The pinto filly had rushed to her mother when the first two shots rang
-out. Together they were leading the flight. Suddenly the mother swerved
-and staggered, plunged down into the grass. The pinto planted her feet
-and halted. Her sudden checking of speed saved her from a bullet which
-had been aimed to break her neck. The lead burned across her forehead
-raising a red welt. The little mare whirled and plunged back into the
-mass of plunging horses. She found Midnight savagely working to force
-the pace, and crowded close to him.
-
-The charging rush of the mares was checked and they swerved in
-bewildered fashion as a new burst of flame and death leaped at them
-from a scrub-oak clump on the edge of the rim well down toward the
-aspen grove. Mares collapsed and colts leaped and ran about wildly.
-Midnight had only one thought, to drive the mares out through the aspen
-grove and into the open country. This was his first meeting with the
-deadly guns of man and, like all wild things, the death which struck
-from far off filled him with terror. But he did not desert the mares. A
-great rage possessed him and almost crowded out the terror. Screaming
-and biting he worried the flanks of the rapidly thinning band.
-
-Death held the little meadow in its bloody grip. The grass was marked
-by twisted bodies. But Midnight knew there was one avenue of escape.
-When the mares hesitated before the guns of Shorty and Cal he attacked
-their flanks with fury and drove them on. This was not just the way Tex
-had planned it. He had figured that the fire from the oaks would make
-the band circle back around the meadow, giving his men at the lower end
-a second chance to kill. He had been sure the band would mill around
-and around the mesa until all were shot down. Now he sat in his saddle
-waiting grimly. It looked as though he would have to turn them.
-
-Midnight had driven the mares into full gallop again. Many went down as
-they swept close to the oak clump where the two men were hidden, but
-they charged straight past. Suddenly the vicious crack of a rifle broke
-from the edge of the aspens. Tex had opened fire, his carbine working
-with speed and murderous accuracy. In the hail of lead mares went down,
-bucking and twisting. The attack was too much for the remnant of the
-band. They dodged and tried to double back. Midnight reared and plunged
-at them, screaming madly. The bewildered and panic-stricken animals
-turned toward the rim and the black stallion sent them plunging toward
-it. When they would have halted at the dizzy drop, with its matted and
-ragged rocks, he lashed them on over the edge. They tumbled downward,
-plunging, rolling, sliding, and twisting. One mare went down with a
-broken leg, another struck a jagged pinnacle of rock and rolled over.
-Behind them Midnight and the pinto took the leap as they came to it.
-
-Tex lowered his rifle. His eyes were on the black stallion and there
-was an excited gleam in them. He had never seen such a magnificent
-beast or such a feat of reckless daring. But all these feelings were
-over-shadowed by something else. He was looking at the long legs, the
-powerful chest, and the slender body of the stallion. He was sure he
-knew the sire and the dam who had brought him into the world. Here was
-the son of the chestnut stallion and Lady Ebony! He wet his lips and
-then grinned eagerly. He did not give the escape of a small part of
-the herd any thought. His mind was making plans, leaping ahead to what
-he would tell Major Howard. He was remembering the voice of Sam saying
-that Lady Ebony would come back to the high country. He was roused by
-Shorty’s amused voice.
-
-“What’s eatin’ you? You look like you was seein’ angels or somethin’.
-Me, I’m plumb sick to my stummick.” Shorty moved over to where he could
-see the trail the band had made in escaping. He bent forward and stared
-at it. “You don’t mean to say some of ’em went over the side here?”
-
-Tex nodded, reloaded his carbine, and made ready to end the misery of
-the mare who had broken her leg.
-
-“How many got away?” Shorty asked. He had a sudden suspicion that Tex
-had not taken full advantage of his chance to clean out the band.
-Certainly the slope where the wild ones had plunged down to safety was
-open and within easy range of the spot where Tex was planted.
-
-“Ten head and a stud,” Tex said and spoke as though to himself.
-
-“Must have been a fire-eater of a stud to force them mares down over a
-cliff like that,” Shorty said with a quick grin.
-
-“He’s a fire-eater,” Tex agreed softly.
-
-The other boys had ridden up and were looking at the trail. Cal spoke
-in his slow drawl.
-
-“I passed up one shot an’ you can report it to the major if you want.
-I had a broadside at a black stud but jest couldn’t find my sights for
-watchin’ him tear into those mares.”
-
-“That stud learned something here today that he won’t forget,” Tex said
-grimly.
-
-“I’ll bet a month’s pay we don’t ever catch that bunch in a place like
-this again,” Shorty said.
-
-The others grinned. They knew the stallion would be wiser and more
-wary now that he had met the guns of men. They were not sorry he had
-got away. Any horse that would lead a crazy charge down the face of a
-brush-matted cliff deserved a break and was no scrub. One of the others
-said:
-
-“I caught a glimpse of him through the dust. He’d make any of the
-major’s blooded stuff look like a broom tail if they were stood up side
-by side. Can’t figure where such a hoss could have come from, must be a
-freak.”
-
-Tex grinned but said nothing. He knew where the big black came from. As
-he moved away he remarked:
-
-“I reckon he might have some good blood in him.”
-
-A plan was forming in the mind of the range boss and he was eager to
-work it out. He wanted to be alone so that he could get it all ready.
-He turned to his men.
-
-“You boys ride on down to the ranch and report to the boss. Tell him
-I’m staying on the trail of the ones that got away. I’ll be in late
-tonight.”
-
-Shorty grinned. “Figure you might be lucky enough to dab a rope on that
-black?” he asked.
-
-“I’d trade every horse in my string but the bay for him,” Tex admitted.
-
-Shorty laughed. He had missed the real significance of the remark. He
-thought Tex wanted the black as a saddler. Tex was a nut when it came
-to saddle stock. He remarked in an amused voice:
-
-“It’ll be a case of sneaking and trailing from now on, and when you do
-dab a rope on him you’d best have some help handy. That baby bites and
-kicks like a cougar.”
-
-Tex nodded full agreement as he rode away from the men. He took the
-regular trail off the mesa and rode around to the foot of the cliff.
-He had no desire to send the bay down over the trail the black had
-made for the mares. At the bottom of the cliff he picked up the trail
-and followed it. He did not have to dismount to tell the tracks of the
-stallion and those of the mares. The tracks of the leader were clean
-and deep, with perfect alignment. The trail led up the mountain in an
-almost straight line and the horses did not halt until they reached the
-barrens high under the rims of the Crazy Kill peaks.
-
-As he rode along Tex planned his course of action. He would ambush the
-black and drop a rope on him. Taking him now would be possible, Tex
-figured, because the black was still a colt and could be handled if
-properly worked. If he stayed in the wild another year he might develop
-into a horse that could never be broken. He was just learning the
-tricks of leadership; that was shown by the trap the mares had walked
-into. Tex grinned eagerly as he planned. He was sure he could convince
-the major, once he looked at the midnight black, that his theory about
-Lady Ebony was correct.
-
-He was also sure that, once convinced that Sam had not stolen the mare,
-the major would get the old man out of the pen quickly. Major Howard
-was an influential man and a determined one when he set out to do
-anything. He was a shrewd judge of blooded horses, and that would help.
-
-Tex was eager to capture the black at once. He had a feeling that if
-Sam was ever to come back to his high mesa he would have to be set
-free that summer. He had talked to the warden and to the doctor at the
-prison and both agreed with him. It was Tex’s way never to consider
-failure. The bay he rode was the fastest horse on the range and Tex
-had accumulated some money and a great many possessions betting on his
-speed. He was at his best in rough country where sure-footed accuracy
-counted for more than speed, and he was powerful enough to handle the
-black once Tex roped him. The bay could lay a five-year-old maverick on
-his side without budging when the bulk of the critter hit the rope.
-
-Tex halted behind a clump of bushes on a ridge and sat looking up a
-long, narrow valley. His keen eyes lighted up with excitement as they
-rested on a small band of horses feeding close to the timbered edge of
-the valley. He spotted the black stallion with a pinto filly feeding
-beside him. Deliberately Tex studied the ground and laid plans. It
-would take most of an hour to circle the band so as to have the timber
-as a screen for his approach and the wind right. And his plan called
-for sending them back into the lower country instead of higher into the
-barrens where trailing would be tough. He was sure the band would feed
-for at least an hour. The mares were fagged and hungry, he could see
-that, even at a great distance. Heading the bay up a narrow ledge, he
-climbed to the top of the rim overlooking the valley and dropped down
-on the far slope.
-
-The pace Midnight had set in driving the mares into the high barrens
-had taxed their strength. They had finally refused to go any further
-and he had let them pause to feed and rest. But he was nervous and
-kept moving about, jerking his head high, sniffing and snorting.
-The excitement of the battle on the mesa below was still in him. He
-lacked the experience of the chestnut stallion and he did not know the
-country into which he was headed. Instinct had made him strike for the
-barrens, but he did not know where to go now that he had reached the
-rough country. So he let the mares feed while he moved about pulling
-a mouthful of grass here and there. The pinto stayed close by him as
-though sure he would protect her from all danger.
-
-Midnight fed above the mares and close to the narrow trail leading up
-to a saddle on the ridge above. The meadow was really a bench with a
-rock wall on one side and a slope on the other. It lay along the edge
-of a deep canyon but it was not a trap as the little meadow had been;
-it was wide open at both ends and timber grew close, affording shelter
-which could be reached in a few seconds. Midnight watched the trail
-above and the meadow below, he tested the air, and he listened.
-
-Suddenly he stiffened, his nostrils flaring as he listened intently.
-The sound of a loosened stone had come to him. The pinto sensed
-something and edged close to his side. Midnight snorted warningly and
-the mares instantly lifted their heads, ready to leap to cover.
-
-Then Midnight saw a rider come charging out of the timber above him.
-The man was mounted on a bay gelding and he was standing up in his
-stirrups whirling a rope around his head. The bay was reaching out with
-powerful strides which carried him over the rough ground at terrific
-speed. Midnight shrilled a warning to the mares. The pinto froze into
-terrified stillness. She did not run but stood rooted beside Midnight,
-staring at the oncoming rider. Midnight expected the roar of guns but
-no explosions came. He was sure other men were hidden below to cut
-off any retreat. But he was on the wrong side of the band of mares to
-drive them upward. He did what the charging cowboy least expected,
-something the chestnut stallion never would have done. He laid back his
-ears, bared his teeth and charged straight at the bay, screaming his
-challenge as he leaped forward.
-
-Tex was startled by the action. He gave the bay his head so the big
-horse could save himself. The bay swerved, dodging aside as he would
-have dodged the charge of an infuriated bull. The loop Tex was swinging
-sagged and jerked into a useless snarl as the bay lunged aside.
-Midnight plunged in and reared, lashing out with his hoofs, reached for
-the bay with his teeth. His pounding hoofs missed the saddler but his
-teeth nipped a gash in the horse’s flank. The bay was a high-spirited,
-nervous beast. He plunged and ducked his head. Grunting and snorting
-he started to pitch. Tex had to ride as he had never ridden before to
-control his mount. He saw Midnight whirl past, then wheel to charge
-again--the black stallion had gone stark mad. His hand dropped to
-the butt of his forty-five. He might have to shoot the big fellow to
-save himself. He jerked out his gun and fired twice into the air over
-Midnight’s head.
-
-The crashing reports jarred some of the rage out of the black stallion.
-He pivoted rapidly. In that moment Tex got the bay under control and
-jerked in his rope. The shot had helped quiet the saddler. With the
-pinto at his side Midnight broke for the trail leading upward.
-
-Tex set his spurs and sent the bay thundering after the black stallion.
-This was just what he wanted. He worked desperately to swing out a
-loop. The black had a hundred yards of go in the open the way he was
-headed. With the big colt running away Tex could drop a rope on him
-and pull him down. He raised himself in the stirrups and swung out his
-loop. Then Tex’s eager grin vanished. The black stallion was running
-away from his bay! He was leaving the fast saddler behind in a way that
-made the saddler seem slow. Tex overhauled the pinto and passed her.
-She was running her best, with neck stretched out and mane flowing,
-heading upward in an attempt to follow the black.
-
-Tex held on until the black stallion thundered out into the saddle
-above and vanished down the far slope. He had not used his spurs on the
-bay. He knew his horse had given everything he had. On the ridge Tex
-pulled up while the bay blew and pawed. Suddenly Tex laughed. He had
-never seen such speed. Now he was certain he had to capture the big
-fellow. He just couldn’t have a horse on the range that was faster than
-the one he owned. Then his laugh died away. He had a more important
-reason for catching the black; in the excitement he had forgotten it.
-
-Midnight charged through the timber and kept going until he reached
-the bottom of a canyon. He halted in a dense growth of river alder and
-called long and loud to the pinto. From far up the mountainside she
-answered him. Her call was frantic and excited. Midnight listened and
-heard a shout from the man who had chased him. He kept still for a long
-time. Finally he called to the pinto again and she answered him from
-lower down the slope. She was hurrying to him as fast as she could
-make her way down the rough slope. Midnight waited and listened. After
-a time he decided the bay and his rider were not coming down into the
-canyon. He could hear the pinto rattling stones and nickering eagerly
-but there was no other sound.
-
-The pinto broke into the alder stand in answer to Midnight’s call
-as she reached the bottom of the canyon. They stood close together,
-watching and listening.
-
-Up on the ridge Tex turned the bay and headed him back down to the long
-meadow. Night would soon settle and he would have no chance to trail
-the black after dark. His best course was to follow the mares and drive
-them into the lower country so that the black stallion would have to
-come down to round them up. He sent the bay galloping along the trail
-the fleeing mares had made as they raced off the bench.
-
-Deep in the canyon Midnight was undecided what he should do. He was
-certain he could not stay where he was. The man would be sure to follow
-them. He finally followed his instinct, which was to put many miles
-between himself and the country which had proved so dangerous. He did
-not have a strong urge to follow the mares and round them up. His
-instincts for leadership were not strong enough to make him look for
-them. He knew of only one place where he had always found safety and
-where he had never been attacked. That place was the little meadow
-under the rim below the high mesa. With a snort he headed up the
-sloping side of the canyon.
-
-The high mesa was far across the mountain on the southern edge of Major
-Howard’s range lands. The old mares had led the band along the backbone
-of the continental divide and down into the lower valleys. Midnight’s
-wild instinct led him unerringly toward the place of his birth and
-early colthood. All that first night the two horses moved steadily
-south and east, climbing upward, following the twisting course of the
-divide. At dawn Midnight and the pinto fed close to a stand of balsam
-and spruce. Five mule deer and a band of elk fed on the same meadow.
-Midnight had a feeling that the deer and the elk would take alarm if
-anyone approached, or it might have been his early friendship with the
-old timber-line buck that made him select the spot as a feed ground.
-
-The deer and the elk paid little attention to the two horses. They
-recognized them as friends and harmless. Neither of them was tainted by
-man smell or the reek of a saddle blanket pungent with leather oil.
-
-Midnight had learned another of the lessons of the wild, a lesson that
-had long since been mastered by the elk and the deer. He would feed at
-dawn and at dusk, when the dim light made rifle sights blur and when
-the eyes of the upright walking killer play tricks on him. All other
-wild things had learned that this was the law. The sunlighted meadows
-were death traps by day, but in the soft dusk of early morning or
-evening there was safety. The big killers obeyed the rule but they did
-it as much because their prey came out of hiding at that time as for
-protection.
-
-The band of elk was headed by a lordly bull who was master of the ten
-cows by virtue of his power and savage willingness to battle any other
-bull who challenged him. As soon as his own sons grew to the age where
-their antlers began to spread into sweeping weapons and their desires
-led them to notice the cows he drove them out of the band. They were
-then lone bulls for a time until they were able to win a harem of their
-own. Nor was he satisfied with defense of his cows. He challenged the
-world to come and try to wrest supremacy from him. His battle moods
-came in midsummer and fall when his shoulder veins were swelling with
-hot blood, and his antlers had hardened to polished lances of bone.
-
-The old wapiti bull was beginning to feel this pugnacious mood. For
-weeks he had been rubbing and polishing his antlers. They gleamed like
-the varnished surface of a piece of fine furniture. During the gray
-of dawn he had fed near the cows. Now that the white light from the
-sun-bathed peaks above was making the meadow bright he began to show
-signs of restlessness. The cows fed on, eager to fill their paunches
-before they sought deep cover to lie down. The old wapiti shook his
-horns and lifted his muzzle. He trotted to a little knoll well above
-his band. He was filled with courage and desire, proud of his fine
-antlers, conscious of the power within his twelve hundred pounds of
-weight. He halted and filled his lungs with air, raised his muzzle,
-and poured forth a guttural roar that increased in pitch to bugle
-tones, higher and higher until it was a blasting whistle which screamed
-through the still air of the mountainside. The high notes quavered
-and faded, ending in a half dozen savage grunts. The old bull seemed
-to know that he had just executed one of the most inspiring pieces of
-music in all nature’s mountain songs. He shook his head and listened
-intently.
-
-From a ridge above the challenge of the lord of the band was answered.
-The challenger’s bugle was not so high and shrill nor so powerful,
-but it was eager and defiant. The bull on the knoll shook his head and
-grunted angrily, then he lifted his muzzle and sent his call ringing
-out through the high, thin air. Again the challenge was answered. A
-young bull was coming down the slope.
-
-In a few minutes the challenger appeared, breaking out of the spruce at
-a trot, his head swinging back and forth. He was lighter than the old
-bull by a few pounds and his antlers were not so well filled, but he
-was big boned and young, a lone knight seeking the end of the lonesome
-trail, desiring to take his place at the head of a band of cows.
-
-The old bull squealed a few short, sharp blasts, his horns swept low,
-he charged to meet the invader. The young bull came on, his pace
-increasing to a fast lope. The two great brutes crashed together, their
-horns locking as they grunted and twisted. For several minutes they
-tussled in this manner, each trying to sweep the other off his feet.
-The young bull was forced to his knees but came up with a lunge which
-set the old one back. Then they parted and backed away, heads still
-lowered, spreading horns protecting vital parts of their bodies. For
-a moment they halted with eyes glaring and breath whistling into the
-grass, then they charged again and the force of the impact sent them
-both to their knees. The old bull was well aware of the advantage his
-few extra pounds gave him and he kept hammering away, thrusting the
-youngster to his knees, eager to weaken him so that he would expose
-himself to the ripping thrust of horns.
-
-The combatants had moved down the slope and the young bull was now on
-the downhill side, moving slowly toward the spot where Midnight and the
-pinto stood watching the battle. A yellow band of sunlight had slipped
-out across the grass. The mule deer, led by an old doe, had slipped
-into the timber to seek a hiding place for the day. The cow elk ceased
-feeding and stood watching the combat out of calm eyes which betrayed
-no hint of favor for either warrior. They would accept the lordship of
-the winner without question. After all, their real leader was a wise
-old cow who knew the ways of the trail and the best hiding places. The
-lord of the herd was master only for the time of the love moon.
-
-The smaller bull began to retreat a little before the onslaught of
-the old bull. They had been fighting a quarter of an hour and the
-youngster’s wind was beginning to give out. They had backed away, the
-challenger still savagely willing to charge but very short of breath.
-As they lunged together, the young bull went down; this time one foot
-slipped and he fell sidewise. Instantly the monarch shook his horns
-free, backed away a step and lunged, his lances lowered. The sharp
-daggers of bone ripped into the side and flank of the young bull. He
-floundered and struggled as the death wound racked him, then he got to
-his feet with an effort. Staggering but with his defenses again down
-and ready he lunged at the old bull. The monarch smashed at him. This
-time he was down with his whole side exposed and the victor was on him.
-
-But the old bull was at the end of his strength, too. He tried to tear
-his adversary into shreds but did not have the power. After a half
-dozen weak thrusts he backed away and stood, blowing and grunting
-savagely, while the youngster got to his feet and staggered toward the
-woods seeking a secluded spot where he could lie down.
-
-Midnight snorted and pawed. The cows shook their heads and turned
-toward the woods following the lead of the wise old cow. With a savage
-grunt the monarch trotted after them.
-
-Midnight turned away. With the pinto filly at his side he trotted
-into the timber and there they bedded down for the day. That night
-they moved again, heading along a ridge with the white stars lighting
-the rocky trail. All night Midnight kept going and dawn found them at
-the edge of the high mesa. With the gray light about them they fed
-close to Sam’s deserted cabin. Midnight felt safer in these familiar
-surroundings. Even the cabin seemed to give a friendly protection
-to him. He crossed the meadow and halted near the head of the trail
-leading down into Shadow Canyon. The pinto was afraid of the cabin at
-first but when Midnight walked up to it in passing across the meadow
-and sniffed about, she joined him. The man smell was dead and old. It
-lacked the pungent freshness which roused fear and caused flight.
-
-The old yellowbelly whistler mounted his perch on the high rock and
-sounded an “all’s-well” whistle. The mesa came to life with the
-chipmunks singing their chorus, the prairie dogs barking, and the other
-chips racing about. With the coming of life to the meadow Midnight
-headed down the trail to cover.
-
-The two horses came to the crevice which lay across the ledge trail.
-It was no longer a barrier, being filled with rocks and torn tree
-trunks with gravel piled in the cracks. Midnight moved down into the
-sunken mass and over it. Together the two plunged up the far side. Now
-Midnight felt secure. With the high walls towering above him and the
-sheer drop into Shadow Canyon guarding the lower side, there was only
-the entrance across the debris-filled crevice and that was hidden from
-the main trail by bushes screening the rocky ledge.
-
-He set to feeding and the pinto joined him. They stayed in the shade
-of the aspen grove which afforded them complete protection from anyone
-who might halt on the rim above and look down. All such a pair of eyes
-would see was the pale-green canopy of the aspen grove. They grazed
-peacefully until they had eaten their fill, then Midnight led the pinto
-to the bed of needles under the Engelmann’s spruce over near the wall.
-There they lay down in the cool shade.
-
-
-
-
-13. Tex Takes the Trail
-
-
-Tex followed the trail of the mares until almost dark. He came up with
-them several times and sent them galloping into the lower valleys.
-He did not shoot any of them because he wished to leave them as an
-attraction for the black stallion. With less than half an hour of
-daylight left he headed over a ridge to one of the high-country
-cabins where food and horse feed were always kept ready for wandering
-cowpunchers and for the boys who rode the high range during the summer.
-
-As he slid from his saddle he saw that someone else was using the
-cabin for the night. Yellow light streamed out of its one dusty window
-and the smell of frying bacon and boiling coffee floated down to the
-corral. Tex unsaddled the bay, watered and grained him, then rubbed him
-down. He always cared for his horse before thinking of his own comfort.
-
-As he shoved open the cabin door he saw Major Howard and Shorty sitting
-at the plank table nailed to the wall under the window. They were just
-finishing a meal of hot biscuit, sugar syrup, bacon, and coffee which
-Shorty had fixed.
-
-“Hello,” Tex greeted them. “Any grub left?”
-
-Shorty grinned widely and the major nodded. Shorty shoved aside the
-packing box he had been sitting on.
-
-“I’ll scorch some bacon and warm up the coffee,” he said. “I
-overestimated the boss’s appetite for biscuits, so there’s plenty.”
-
-“Shorty made enough biscuits for six men,” the major said.
-
-Tex eased his lank frame down on the packing box. He was ravenously
-hungry. Reaching for a biscuit he broke it, exposing its snowy center.
-The major watched him as he crammed half the biscuit into his mouth.
-
-“I have been down to the meadow where you trapped those wild horses.
-You did a nice job, Tex.”
-
-Tex grunted as he shoved the other half of the biscuit into his mouth.
-
-The major added by way of defending himself against killing the mares:
-
-“Not a single head worth rounding up.”
-
-“I reckon not,” Tex agreed. Then he leaned forward and spoke with
-considered slowness: “The stud got away and he’s a winner. He outran my
-bay on level ground in a straightaway run.”
-
-The major showed his interest at once. He had always wanted to capture
-a real wild stallion that had quality. He had an idea he could do some
-crossbreeding that might have interesting results.
-
-“Stallion?” he asked.
-
-“A black stud, long two-year-old. Fine racin’ legs, big chest, and the
-heart of a winner. He turned on me and come near knockin’ me out of my
-saddle.” Tex grinned as he remembered that charge.
-
-The major smiled too, an eager smile. “He must have spirit. Racing legs
-and body--h-mmm.” He picked up a biscuit absently and crumbled the
-corner of it. Then he shot a penetrating glance at Tex and asked, “And
-you think you know his sire and dam?”
-
-“That colt is out of Lady Ebony by the chestnut stud that led the
-wild band. The chestnut is the thief that stole your mare, major. The
-chestnut is gone, can’t figure exactly how he got killed, but I’m sure
-he’s dead. The black colt couldn’t handle him, not yet. But the black
-was running the band and he got the job too young.” Tex reached for
-another biscuit. “I reckon he’s learning fast, though.”
-
-Major Howard got out his pipe. He loaded it carefully, then lighted it.
-He was watching Tex narrowly. For a full minute he puffed deeply, the
-blue-white smoke curling up around his graying hair. When he spoke his
-voice lacked the assurance it usually carried.
-
-“You never give up once you get an idea, do you, Tex?”
-
-“It’s as clear as day to me,” Tex said simply.
-
-“This long two-year-old can outrun anything on my ranch.” The major
-spoke almost to himself.
-
-“And rest while he’s doing it,” Tex said.
-
-“You better bring him in. He may not be so good as he looked today, but
-if he has the markings of that black mare I’ll know it. I’d like to
-experiment with a stallion like that.”
-
-“I figure on bringing him in if it takes all summer.” Tex leaned
-forward. The bacon Shorty had set before him went unnoticed. “If you
-figure I’m right you could do something for Sam?” Tex knew he was
-treading on dangerous ground. Mention of Sam always irritated the major.
-
-“When I’m convinced, I’ll do what I can,” he said gruffly.
-
-Tex knew there was no use talking any more about it. He would round up
-the black and bring him in. Once the major set eyes on the stallion he
-would know the black was Lady Ebony’s son. Then the major would get Sam
-out of his cell. Tex had the major figured that way.
-
-With supper over the men rolled up in their blankets. The major slept
-in the wall bunk while Tex and Shorty bedded down on the floor. They
-did not stay up longer than the time it took to wash the dishes and
-split some wood for the breakfast fire. They would all be up and in the
-saddle by daylight the next morning. Tex meant to ride the upper range
-and to map out his campaign. He had a feeling there was need for haste.
-The black stallion would have to be brought in that summer. Sam had to
-be got back to his high mesa if he was to come at all.
-
-The next morning Tex was up before the other two men had wakened. He
-made coffee in the blackened pot and finished up what had been left
-of Shorty’s biscuits. With a can of tomatoes, a tin of fish and some
-coffee from the cupboard he left the cabin.
-
-The rising sun found him on a high ridge overlooking the sweep of the
-lower slopes of the Crazy Kills. He studied the meadows below, watching
-the timbered edges of the clearings, but he saw no sign of the black
-stallion. After that he set about checking the meadows, following the
-trails from valley to valley. About noon he came on two of the wild
-mares. He did not alarm them and they did not know he had seen them.
-Later he came on three more in a meadow far from where he had located
-the first two. At four that afternoon he found two others feeding
-beside a stream miles from the others. And he had come across no sign
-of the black stallion, not even his tracks. He began to wonder what
-had happened to the colt. And he was beginning to wonder if the band
-had not separated for good. The mares he had come on had been feeding
-or lying down. They had not seemed to be looking for the others. Tex
-refused to be worried, but he rode until darkness forced a halt. He
-built a little fire to heat water for coffee. He had eaten the tinned
-fish and tomatoes at noon. But he was determined to camp where he was
-and go on with the search in the morning.
-
-The next day Tex rode until evening without coming on the black
-or crossing his trail. He was convinced now that the stallion was
-making no effort to round up the mares, that he was too young and
-inexperienced to have developed band leadership. He knew he faced a
-tough job but he had no idea of quitting. He would need a pack horse
-and supplies to stay in the hills more than two days. That meant he
-would have to return to the home ranch.
-
-He rode back to the high-line cabin and cooked a meal. There was no one
-at the cabin and he rolled up on the bunk as soon as he had eaten. The
-next day he headed for the home ranch.
-
-The major did not object when Tex told him his plans. But Tex knew
-that a week would probably be all he would be allowed for the hunt.
-The major would be calling him in to take charge of other work. He was
-convinced his boss was giving him this time so that he would have a
-chance to settle the matter that had been between them since Sam was
-taken away.
-
-Tex rode into the high country. He laid his plans carefully. He meant
-to cover the range from timber line down in a careful check of all
-meadows and feed grounds. He was sure he would miss no spot where a
-wild horse would stay because he had ridden the Crazy Kill slopes for
-fifteen years and knew every foot of the ground.
-
-Methodically he worked, from the north limits toward the south. He
-accounted for all the wild horses except Midnight and the pinto filly.
-At the end of the week he was worried. The black stallion must have
-gone down into the desert or over the divide into the wild country
-beyond Major Howard’s range. He had to admit he had failed in a job
-that seemed to him important. He knew there was no use trying to make a
-ride into the desert. That vast expanse of sand and canyons stretched
-clear to the Mexican border, while the wild country beyond the Crazy
-Kills was worse than the desert. It was canyon-slotted and grown dense
-with timber. No ranchers used it as a range. It was virgin wilderness
-and it was a hundred miles deep.
-
-When Major Howard ordered Tex to take charge of the drive that would
-bring the new herds of cattle to the high country from the railroad
-yards he did not object. He had had his chance and had failed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the foot of the high walls overlooking Shadow Canyon, Midnight and
-the pinto stayed hidden in the aspen grove by day. At night they either
-fed in the little meadow or climbed up to the high mesa. When they were
-on the high mesa they raced and played. They never stayed after dawn
-broke. Twice they scented man smell on the wind and dashed to cover
-along the ledge trail.
-
-The day Tex checked the high mesa for tracks or signs they were feeding
-below and had not been on top for several days. Rain had come and their
-tracks had been washed out. He had passed on after looking inside Sam’s
-cabin and noting how it was falling apart from disuse.
-
-The pinto pony trusted Midnight and he had his past experience to make
-him feel secure in his hideout. But he did not forget the lessons he
-had learned, and no buck deer was more alert and watchful than he.
-
-Many times Midnight led the pinto around the track he had laid out.
-They often ran by daylight, around and around, leaping over logs and
-rocks and pounding in a reckless chase over the rough trail. Midnight
-could easily outdistance the filly, but he never ran away from her when
-she dropped behind.
-
-As the days passed, both horses became sleek and fat, but Midnight
-did not lose his speed or power. He never became lazy, because of the
-nervous, high spirits which filled him. He was fast coming to the place
-where he would not be satisfied with the company of one filly, but
-another season would pass before he was ready to go forth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In a town below the ridges and wild barrens, behind drab, gray walls
-old Sam had at last given up the fight. One morning he did not answer
-early call and they found him lying on his cot peacefully sleeping.
-He would not stir and seemed not to have the wiry strength that had
-carried him along. The warden and the doctor came. Sam was taken to the
-hospital and placed on a white bed. Outside the door of his room the
-doctor faced the warden.
-
-“The state will not be burdened over a couple of months longer by that
-old codger,” he said.
-
-“What ails him?” the warden asked.
-
-“What would ail any wild thing that was cooped up in one of your
-cells?” the doctor asked, then turned abruptly away.
-
-The warden went back to his office and looked into Sam’s file. No one
-had taken any interest in the case except Tex and he had written only
-one letter because writing was something he seldom did. The warden put
-the file away and made a note of what the doctor had said.
-
-
-
-
-14. Beside the Castle Rocks
-
-
-With an uneasy jerk Tex tore open the envelope the major handed him.
-He was not used to getting letters and this one was postmarked at the
-state prison. He fished out a single sheet of paper and stared at it.
-The major had read the postmark and stood waiting for Tex to speak.
-
-There was a brief line at the beginning of the letter. The message was
-from Sam and the warden had written the letter for him. Tex turned away
-from the major and walked down to the horse corral before he read any
-further. He wanted to be alone. Leaning over the pole gate he finished
-the letter. The message was brief, very much like Sam. Tex’s lips moved
-as he repeated the words to himself.
-
-“I put off writin’ figurin’ to see you. Reckon I won’t, so the warden
-is writin’ this to you. They got a buryin’ spot down here they call
-Woodpecker Hill. It’s good enough fer an old gopher miner but I still
-got a hankerin’ to get back to the top of the world. If it won’t put
-you out too much, Tex, I’d like to be planted near the ledge trail at
-the foot of the castle rocks. Jest lift the rock under the right front
-leg of the stove and you’ll find a poke of dust I cached. There’ll be
-enough in it to do the job. I want you should keep what’s left over.
-Figure I’ll hang on till I get a letter back from you. The doc says no,
-but I’ve fooled ’em before. Sam.”
-
-Tex folded the sheet into a wad and shoved it into the pocket of his
-chaps. He stared for a long time through the white sunlight. His bay
-gelding came over to the fence and nudged his arm. Tex turned around.
-
-“We shore let old Sam down,” he said grimly. “But this time we’ll not
-flop on him.”
-
-He reached over and caught the horn of his saddle which was tossed
-across the top pole of the corral. As he was jerking the cinch tight
-around the belly of the bay a few minutes later, the major’s shadow
-appeared near the gate. Tex did not turn around. He did not feel like
-telling the major anything. The last time he had tried to talk to him
-about getting Sam freed his boss had been irritated and short in his
-refusal. Tex had a feeling the major even believed he had invented the
-story about the black stud, with the help of Shorty, in order to get
-his sympathy. The major watched in silence until Tex faced the gate,
-then he spoke.
-
-“I want to have a look at the new stock. You can ride into the aspen
-range with me and show me around.”
-
-Tex nodded. There was no use in writing to Sam now. The mail would not
-be picked up until the next day. He could take a couple of days off and
-ride in, but he didn’t feel equal to facing the old man after the way
-he had let him down.
-
-By midafternoon the pair were high in the aspen country and close to
-the spruce belt. Tex had taken the major to the meadows where the new
-stock grazed. They had halted on a ridge as the major had a way of
-doing and were gazing over the vast country below. The major always got
-a thrill out of looking over his vast domain. He never tired of the
-rolling foothills and the wide, grassy valleys, all his.
-
-Tex could see the high mesa on the rim of Shadow Canyon. He could see
-the castle rocks where Sam wanted to be planted. A desire to ride down
-to the spot laid hold of him. He could get the poke of gold while he
-was there. When the major was ready to move on, Tex headed down the
-slope. Within an hour they broke out on the high meadow. The major
-looked across at Tex questioningly but said nothing. He knew none of
-the new stock were run that far south. But he was more interested in
-the letter Tex had got than he cared to show and was sure this visit
-had something to do with it. He feared the old man had died in prison,
-and the thought stirred the old train of doubts as to the course he had
-followed.
-
-They rode down to the castle rocks before going to the cabin. Tex
-dismounted and stood at the base of the rocks where Sam had said he
-wanted to lie. When he looked over the expanse of country below he knew
-why Sam had picked this spot. From the ledge he could see far across
-the hazy lower valley to the distant peaks of the Sleepy Range, while
-on the right he could look out over the purple expanse of the desert
-with its spires and red rims gleaming in the late sunlight. At his feet
-yawned Shadow Canyon. From its twilight depths came the rumble of a
-rushing stream. The music rose and fell in steady cadence. Tex drew in
-his breath sharply and turned toward the major.
-
-As he turned a flash of movement below caught his eye. He stepped
-closer to the canyon rim and looked down on a little meadow. At first
-he saw nothing but a little beaver lake, a grove of aspens, and a stand
-of spruce. Then a black horse flashed out of the timber running madly.
-Close on his heels came a pinto filly. They were heading straight at
-a barrier of logs. They reached the barrier and lifted like birds,
-sailing over it easily. Their manes and tails flowed out as they
-pounded along.
-
-“Look!” Tex called hoarsely as he pointed downward.
-
-The major slid from his horse and stood beside Tex. The flying horses
-had vanished into the aspen grove and Tex grunted disgustedly. In a
-moment they appeared again and took the log barrier in a mad leap. Both
-men stood in silence watching the big black stallion as he cleared the
-barrier and raced away. The horses vanished but appeared again as they
-charged around the little circle below. Then they vanished and did not
-appear again.
-
-For a long minute the two men faced each other. It was the major who
-spoke.
-
-“Tex,” he said gruffly, “I’m a stubborn fool.” He held out his hand.
-“Let me see that letter you got from the state prison.”
-
-Tex dug out the letter and handed it to him. The major read it quickly.
-When he had finished he folded it carefully and handed it back to Tex.
-Relief and eagerness showed on his face, as he turned toward his horse.
-
-“We’ll ride for the ranch. If I hit the trail hard enough I can catch
-the midnight train at Painted Rocks.”
-
-Tex grinned. He said nothing, but he was in his saddle before the major
-reached his horse.
-
-
-
-
-15. Home to Stay
-
-
-The old yellowbelly whistler was uneasy. He scented the coming of
-a cold snap, a heavy snow perhaps. The aspens were flaming yellow,
-the oak brush purple and red, its rounded clumps looking like fine
-upholstery laid on an immense piece of furniture. The calico chips
-darted around in frantic haste as they gathered seeds to add to their
-bulging granaries. Even the rockchips were more active than usual. They
-did not spend so much time hugging their fat bellies and mooning into
-the distance. The dog colony was as noisy and busy as usual but there
-was a difference in their chatter. This was a time of uncertainty.
-Indian summer had to end. It had held the high country in its drowsy
-spell for many days. Now the air had a different feel.
-
-Down by the castle rocks there was a newly made pile of rocks. This
-disturbance of the scenery had upset the small folk of the meadow for
-a while but now they were used to it. The calico chips used it as a
-hiding place and even the whistlers had explored it carefully.
-
-Suddenly the meadow rang with an eager whinny, followed by a loud
-snort and the pounding of hoofs against the dry, hard ground. A black
-stallion and a pinto filly broke from the head of the Shadow Canyon
-trail. They raced wildly around the mesa, kicking and dodging.
-They swung down past the castle rocks and the black stallion made a
-magnificent show of shying and plunging as they passed the pile of
-rocks. Saluting the mound with a flash of his heels he raced back
-toward the old cabin.
-
-Midnight slid to a halt before the cabin and called loudly. He advanced
-toward the door shaking his head and snorting, his eyes rolling wildly.
-
-The door of the cabin hung open. A blue-white wreath of smoke curled
-out and up into the air, then old Sam stepped through the doorway. He
-stood for a moment steadying himself, one hand against the casing, then
-he shuffled outside and sank down on the ancient willow chair. As he
-seated himself he dug into a pocket of his worn jacket and brought out
-a handful of dingy lump sugar.
-
-“No human critter could of got me outside today the way my rheumatiz
-joints is shoutin’ fer a storm,” he said.
-
-He held out one hand with two lumps of sugar in it. The black stallion
-edged closer, his legs trembling, his nostrils flaring eagerly. The
-pinto filly crowded ahead of him and her pink nose deftly whisked the
-sugar out of Sam’s palm. Old Sam chuckled as he placed two more lumps
-in his palm.
-
-“Lady, you act plumb scandalous fer a wild hoss,” he said.
-
-Midnight had edged close now. He gathered up the two lumps and crunched
-them eagerly. Even after weeks of coaxing and tempting Sam had not
-quieted all the fears in the heart of the stallion. Sam doled out the
-sweets slowly, making them last as long as possible. When they were
-gone he got to his feet, and picked up a tin pail beside the door.
-Walking to a bare spot of ground near the corner of the cabin he
-poured out a liberal measure of oats.
-
-Midnight stood watching, ready to charge away. The pinto shouldered up
-close to Sam, letting him run his hand along her neck. Watching her
-gather up the oats was too much for the black; he crowded in to get his
-share, but not until Sam had backed away.
-
-Midnight and the pinto gathered up every grain of oats, then they
-trotted out into the meadow and began feeding. Sam filled his pipe and
-settled back to let the sun warm his joints. He was glad his visitors
-had routed him out. The sun was really fine. After a few minutes of its
-warmth he began thinking about walking down to the new prospect hole
-he had dug at the base of the castle rocks. He chuckled to himself as
-he thought about it but he did not move. He was remembering how he had
-written to Tex asking him to dig a hole on that very spot. He wondered
-what Tex would have done if he had dug that hole and then discovered
-he had uncovered a vein of gold-bearing quartz. Sam had a feeling Tex
-would have dug a buryin’ hole and let it go at that. That was what he
-thought of Tex.
-
-Out on the meadow a chipmunk had mounted a stone. His voice rang out.
-“Chock! Chock! Chock!” like the rattle of an old alarm clock. Instantly
-every chipmunk in the meadow raced to his sing perch and the meadow
-rang with their song. The fat yellowbelly on guard stretched his neck
-and blasted a short whistle, then pulled in his neck with a deep
-chuckle. He always disapproved such a chatter.
-
-Sam’s pipe rolled to the corner of his mouth and turned upside down.
-One fumbling hand found the gold chain of his big watch. He pulled it
-out and bent above the dial. His lips moved as he counted. When the
-chorus died away he was grinning happily.
-
-“One hunnert eighty a minnit,” he mumbled. “That there’s a youngster
-jest comin’ into his growth. Come spring he’ll do two hunnert.”
-
-As he tucked the ancient watch back into his pocket he sniffed the
-air. Twisting his neck he looked up at the spruce ridge. Gray clouds
-raced above the tops of the trees, and he could hear the moaning of
-a cold wind rushing through the needles. Below the clouds moved a
-curtain of white, swirling flakes. Sam got to his feet. His watery eyes
-rested for a moment on a pile of baled hay stacked against the end
-of the cabin and flanked by a great stack of split firewood. Tex had
-fixed everything. Let the snows come, he’d be snug as any one of the
-yellowbellies. And the two horses would not have to worry either.
-
-“I reckon I’ll jest hole up fer a spell,” he said.
-
-Down on the meadow Midnight had jerked up his head and was watching the
-storm sweep across the mesa. Sam stood at the door looking out on the
-scene until the form of the big stallion was swallowed by the wall of
-snow.
-
-
-
-
-As handsome as he is wild--that’s
-
-MIDNIGHT
-
-Son of a beautiful purebred mare and a wild stallion, the gangling colt
-grows up under the stern law of the wild ... until his flying hooves
-and bitterly learned store of experience make him leader of his own
-untamed band.
-
-The thrilling tale of a freedom-loving horse in the Western mountains.
-
- SCHOLASTIC BOOK SERVICES
- =SBS= New York · London · Richmond Hill, Ontario
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Spelling and hyphenation have been retained as they appear in the
-original publication except as follows:
-
- Page 20
- and cerainly limited _changed to_
- and certainly limited
-
- Page 95
- Midnight back away a few yards _changed to_
- Midnight backed away a few yards
-
- Page 103
- One moonlight night as Midnight _changed to_
- One moonlit night as Midnight
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Midnight, by
-Rutherford George Montgomery (1894-1985)
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIDNIGHT ***
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-
-Project Gutenberg's Midnight, by Rutherford George Montgomery (1894-1985)
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Midnight
-
-Author: Rutherford George Montgomery (1894-1985)
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2019 [EBook #60458]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MIDNIGHT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Laura Brown and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h1>Midnight</h1>
-<hr class="divider2" />
-
-
-<div class="hidehand">
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<img src="images/cover2.jpg" width="400" height="631" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h2>THE AUTHOR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noi">RUTHERFORD MONTGOMERY would rather
-write than do anything else in the world. Most of
-his books are about animals and the wilderness he
-knows so well. As a boy, Mr. Montgomery would
-listen to the tales told by hunters, and his favorite
-sport then and now is going into the woodland and
-sitting quietly on a log, observing the children of
-the wild. He is a watcher, not a hunter.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Montgomery was born in North Dakota,
-and taught school for ten years in Wyoming and
-Colorado after graduating from Colorado Agricultural
-College. He saw service in the United
-States Flying Corps in World War I. Later, he was
-a county judge in Colorado and held state offices
-there. He now lives in Los Gatos, California.</p>
-
-<p class="center p180">* * *</p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<p class="center">Other Books by Rutherford Montgomery</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li>Broken Fang *</li>
-<li>Gray Wolf *</li>
-<li>White Mountaineer</li>
-<li>McGonigle’s Lake</li>
-<li>Yellow Eyes *</li>
-<li>Kildee House</li>
-<li>Big Brownie</li>
-<li>Ghost Town Adventure *</li>
-</ul>
-<p class="center">* <i>Available from Scholastic Book Services</i></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<p class="center p180">MIDNIGHT</p>
-
-<p class="center p140">RUTHERFORD MONTGOMERY</p>
-
-<p class="center p120"><b>SBS</b> SCHOLASTIC BOOK SERVICES<br />
-New York Toronto London Auckland Sydney</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p140">To Earl Hammock<br />
-who knows the value of<br />
-the lonesome places</p>
-
-
-<p class="noi">This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not be
-resold, lent, or otherwise circulated in any binding or cover other
-than that in which it is published&mdash;unless prior written permission
-has been obtained from the publisher&mdash;and without a similar
-condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent
-purchaser.</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Copyright 1940 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. Illustrations
-copyright 1949 by Pocket Books, Inc. This edition is published by
-Scholastic Book Services, a division of Scholastic Magazines, Inc.,
-by arrangement with Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.</p>
-
-<div class="container">
-<div class="float-left">8th Printing</div>
-<div class="float-right">November 1969</div>
-
-<div class="center clear-both">Printed in the U.S.A.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h2><a name="contents" id="contents"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<th class="tdr">CHAPTER</th>
-<th class="tdl">&nbsp;</th>
-<th class="tdr2">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">1.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Pals</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#i">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">2.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Wild Horse</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#ii">10</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">3.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Horse Thief</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iii">20</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">4.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Desert Winter</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#iv">25</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">5.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Wild-Horse Drive</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#v">36</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">6.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Midnight</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vi">45</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">7.</td>
-<td class="tdl">The Way of the High Country</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#vii">62</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">8.</td>
-<td class="tdl">The Strong Survive</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#viii">75</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">9.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Prisoner</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#ix">87</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">10.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Escape</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#x">94</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">11.</td>
-<td class="tdl">New Trails</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xi">108</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">12.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Doom of the Band</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xii">120</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">13.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Tex Takes the Trail</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xiii">140</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">14.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Beside the Castle Rocks</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xiv">147</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">15.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Home to Stay</td>
-<td class="tdr2"><a href="#xv">151</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter width400">
-<img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="400" height="571" alt="Frontispiece" />
-<div class="caption">Midnight tried to whirl but the ledge was too narrow.</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<h2><a name="i" id="i"></a>1. Pals</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Sam</span> was meditating. Tipped back in a chair made of
-river alder and willow, he leaned against the log wall of
-his cabin. His shoeless feet were swathed in wrinkled
-socks of the kind that come to a point at the toe where
-a tuft of thread keeps the cotton yarn from unraveling.
-Sam’s blue shirt was faded from too many washings in
-the creek below the cabin. The only unfaded portions of
-the shirt were hidden by his wide, yellow suspenders.</p>
-
-<p>Sam’s tired, blue eyes stared out over his “stompin’
-ground,” which was a high mesa overlooking the blue
-depths of Shadow Canyon. Across the mesa meandered
-a chain of castle rocks. This outcropping was red and
-yellow in color. It stood on edge, silent evidence of the
-upheaval which had formed the Crazy Kill Mountains
-millions of years before. Sam’s toothless gums clamped
-down on the stem of his cold pipe. Keeping the pipe
-right side up was the heaviest work Sam planned for
-that morning.</p>
-
-<p>Out in a lush meadow which crowded like a green
-carpet around the castle rocks there was plenty of
-healthy contrast to the lazy inactivity that filled Sam.
-He let his eyes wander fondly over the scene. Up near
-the base of the biggest castle five fat yellowbelly whistlers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-romped about among the rocks. A sixth sat like a
-round ball of silver fur, perched on the top of a high
-rock. The old rockchuck on guard was as relaxed and
-lazy as Sam, except for his beady eyes. Those eyes saw
-everything that moved, as far away as the spruce woods
-which bordered the upper side of the mesa.</p>
-
-<p>Sam studied the yellowbelly whistlers with a spark
-of interest in his faded eyes. They were yellowish animals
-with long, silvery hairs covering their brown coats,
-giving them a shining appearance when they romped in
-the sun. They had dark-brown heads and tails, and a
-whitish band across their faces. They rolled through the
-grass and over the rocks, front end up, hind end up,
-rocking along on their stubby legs.</p>
-
-<p>Many smaller fellows courted the protection of the
-yellowbellies, making good use of the sharp eyes of the
-sentinel whistler perched high on his lookout. A dozen
-rockchips dodged about in the grass while as many more
-sat on little rocks and stared away toward the snow-capped
-peaks of the Crazy Kill Range. These potbellied
-little brownies of the high country were well content
-with the crumbs from the great one’s table. The keen
-eyes and the ready blast of warning from the high rock
-removed their chief worries. The sentinel whistler was
-sure to announce the arrival of the swift-hawk, the
-laughing coyote, the martens, or the bobcat. There were
-many other enemies of the air and the forest and the
-whistler watched for and spotted all of them.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the calico chip, a two-striped ground
-squirrel whose vast energy always made Sam feel tired.
-The calico chips dashed about with an energy which
-had undoubtedly been intended for some much larger
-animal, but must have been misplaced when Mother
-Nature laid out the blueprints of creation. The calico
-chips were always too busy chasing bugs or gathering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-and storing seeds to pause for meditation. They left
-foolish gawking into space to the potbellied rockchips.
-But their little ears were always tuned to catch the
-warning blast of the big whistler.</p>
-
-<p>There was a sprinkling of lesser chipmunks, a dozen
-or more. Sam noted with satisfaction that their number
-was increasing. He had brought two pairs in with him
-several summers before. They were active, noisy little
-fellows, dashing about, hoisting their tails like flags
-when they came to a halt. Every so often one of them
-would dash to a rock and jump on top of it. He would
-sit very straight and burst into song.</p>
-
-<p>“Chock! Chock! Chock!” in quick succession, like the
-rattle of an old alarm clock. Sometimes the song would
-be pitched higher and would go “Check, check, check,
-chir-r-r-up!” No sooner had one chipmunk mounted his
-song perch than all the others would dart to theirs, always
-the same perches. The meadow would ring with
-their chorus.</p>
-
-<p>Their round of music never failed to disturb the fat
-sentinel whistler. He would shake his silver robe, stretch
-his neck, then blast three short, sharp notes on his whistle,
-after which he would settle back with a deep
-chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>Sam’s pipe always rolled to the corner of his mouth
-and turned upside down when the chorus began. One
-fumbling hand would pull out his ancient, silver watch
-and he would fix his gaze fiercely on the second hand.
-From the chorus he would select one voice and count
-the “chocks” while he timed the singer. One hundred
-and seventy “chocks” per minute was the best time he
-had ever recorded. The poorest, seventy per minute, was
-made by a fellow whose little round belly hinted that he
-might have a bit of rockchip blood in him.</p>
-
-<p>From far down the meadow, where a clear stream<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-foamed over ragged rocks, came the eager whinny of a
-horse. Sam’s eyes lighted, and he shoved the big, silver
-watch into his pocket. Up the meadow galloped a trim
-black mare. Her mane flowed in the wind as she shook
-her head, and kicked her heels recklessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Purty, right purty,” Sam muttered as he took his pipe
-out of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>The trim mare slowed to a trot as she neared the
-cabin. With a toss of her head and a playful leap to one
-side, she trotted up to Sam and extended her soft muzzle,
-nickering eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Mornin’, Lady Ebony,” Sam said affectionately.
-“Think mebby ol’ Sam’s got a lump o’ sugar?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony pawed and nickered.</p>
-
-<p>Sam dug a hand into his pants pocket and brought
-out two dingy lumps of sugar. He dusted off a grain or
-two of tobacco and a little chaff, then held one of them
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“Jest a bite, ol’ gal,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony picked the sugar from between his thumb
-and finger with a dainty movement of her lips. She
-crunched the lump eagerly, and when it was gone she
-pricked her ears forward and pawed.</p>
-
-<p>Sam grinned widely. “Dang me, if you can’t count,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>The other lump of sugar was extended and Lady
-Ebony took it. Sam let the forelegs of the chair down
-and got to his feet stiffly. He patted the glistening neck
-of the mare and talked softly to her. Lady Ebony accepted
-the caresses. Sam sat down again and the mare
-nosed around the cabin door a while before trotting out
-into the meadow where she set to feeding on the tall
-grass.</p>
-
-<p>The yellowbelly on the lookout perch paid no attention
-to the mare. The calico chips and the chipmunks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-went on chasing bugs and hunting seeds. They knew the
-black mare was a friend and that her enemies were their
-enemies, the cougar and the gray wolf.</p>
-
-<p>Sam sucked on his pipe. His eyes followed Lady
-Ebony. Ever since she was a wobbly colt she had summered
-in this high pasture. She carried the brand of
-Major Howard, an Easterner who had come west to raise
-cattle and horses. He had many horses on the range
-and paid little attention to any but his purebreds which
-he kept at the ranch in the valley. But Sam knew a
-fine horse. He had owned many slim, tough saddlers like
-the black mare. He was too old and stiff to ride but he
-wanted to own the black mare, just to have her as a pal.
-He had babied her and petted her until she was devoted
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>Sam looked into the cold bowl of his pipe. He wanted
-to smoke, but his tobacco was inside the cabin. It was a
-terrible nuisance the way he forgot things like that. His
-eyes shifted to the fat sentinel on the rock. The yellowbelly
-was sitting up very straight. Suddenly he shook
-himself and whistled shrilly. Instantly the calico chips,
-the rockchips, and the chipmunks vanished into the grass.
-The feeding whistlers romped to their holes at the base
-of the biggest castle rock.</p>
-
-<p>“Tarnation!” Sam muttered angrily. He reached back
-inside his door, and dragged out an ancient single-barreled
-shotgun. Laying the gun across his knees he
-squinted up into the sky.</p>
-
-<p>“Thet durn hawk’s been askin’ fer it,” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>But the danger signal did not herald an air raid. Sam
-heard the thudding of ironshod hoofs. He did not bother
-to turn around. A horseman galloped up to his door and
-halted. The rider bent down and greeted Sam.</p>
-
-<p>“Morning, Sam.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>
-“Mornin’, major,” Sam answered. A slow grin parted
-his straggling beard.</p>
-
-<p>Major Howard’s gray eyes roved over the meadow,
-and came to rest on the black mare. The major was an
-energetic, hot-tempered person who rode hard and
-drove hard bargains. The easy way of the western mountain
-people irritated him. He respected Sam’s squatter
-rights to the mesa and the old cabin because he had
-more grass than he needed.</p>
-
-<p>“I was wonderin’, major,” Sam began slowly, “if you
-wouldn’t sell me that black mare. I’d kind of like to have
-her. Got a feeling like she’s a pal, havin’ her here so
-much.”</p>
-
-<p>The major laughed and his gray eyes moved back to
-Sam’s face. “That mare is purebred racing stock, Sam.
-I never paid much attention to her until I saw her on
-the run the other day. She’s fast, the fastest thing I have
-loose on the range. This fall she’ll clean up the cow-pony
-races at the state fair.” The major chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“Me and the filly has hit it off right nice. I thought
-mebby you’d sell her,” Sam said gently.</p>
-
-<p>The major looked down at Sam and his eyes twinkled.
-“Tell you what, Sam,” he said jokingly. “I never had anything
-I wouldn’t sell if I got my price. I’ll sell you that
-black filly for five hundred dollars.” He bent forward
-until the saddle horn creased his ample waistline. “But I
-get to race her at the fair.”</p>
-
-<p>Sam grunted. “Reckon I may take you up,” he said
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p>The major kept his face straight. He was sure Sam
-didn’t have ten dollars to his name. The old prospector
-always managed to scratch together enough dust to buy a
-few groceries, but never had more than that. He nodded
-his head. This would be a good joke to tell the boys at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-the ranch. His eyes dropped to the ancient shotgun, and
-to keep from laughing he asked abruptly:</p>
-
-<p>“What have you been shooting?”</p>
-
-<p>“Got her charged with rock salt an’ bird shot,” Sam
-explained seriously. “Makes an ol’ gray wolf hit it lickety-split.
-And one of them swift-hawks shore claws air fit to
-shake out his tail feathers when I tech him up.” He
-grinned widely.</p>
-
-<p>The major nodded. “Glad you keep that gun handy.
-It will keep wolves and cougars away from the mare.”
-He recalled stories the old hands on the ranch told about
-Sam’s youthful prowess with a carbine and a forty-five
-Colt. He supposed the old prospector’s eyes were so
-bad he had to use a scatter-gun.</p>
-
-<p>“Got a shank o’ venison on the stove. Cold, but makes
-right nice chawin’,” Sam said hospitably, but he didn’t
-move.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, but I’ll have to be hitting the trail. I want to
-ride down along the west drift fence today.” The major
-clicked his tongue, and touched the flanks of his spirited
-horse with his spurs. He galloped away over the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>Sam sat looking out across the waving grass. Five hundred
-dollars. And he hadn’t missed the amusement which
-greeted his offer to buy the mare. Sam was irritated. He
-wanted the filly more than ever now. He smiled and
-mumbled to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“The major’s goin’ to be plumb surprised when I dish
-out that five hundred.”</p>
-
-<p>He got stiffly to his feet and moved into the cabin.
-Setting the old gun just inside the door he took a muslin
-sack from the table and filled his pipe. Then he absent-mindedly
-laid the sack back where it had been. He
-shuffled about the room looking at the objects he had
-hung on the walls, a worn horseshoe, a belt with a holster
-containing a forty-five Colt of the frontier model, several<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-bright pictures cut from calendars. Finally he remembered
-he hadn’t lighted his pipe. He shuffled to where a
-packing box was nailed to the wall back of the stove
-and got several matches from a rusty tomato can. After
-lighting the pipe he puffed contentedly.</p>
-
-<p>That day Sam stirred around more than usual. He
-made up a pack of food and small articles which he
-wrapped in a blanket roll. The pack was set beside the
-door. The job took up most of the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Sam was up early. Lady Ebony
-came galloping across the meadow for her morning ration
-of lump sugar. As he gave it to her he talked in a low,
-confidential voice to the mare.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t reckon nobody but you and me knows that
-ol’ Sam’s got him a claim back under the rim.” He
-chuckled. “Reckon, Lady, it’ll take ol’ Sam ’bout three
-weeks to pan out five hundred in yaller dust.” He patted
-her sleek, black neck. “You jest stay around here an’
-wait in this medder where there’s good grass. The ol’
-yallerbelly’ll keep an eye out for wolves and cougars.”</p>
-
-<p>The mare watched as he shouldered his pack and
-trudged slowly up the slope. She did not follow him, but
-she nickered several times. At the edge of the spruce
-Sam turned around and waved his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony arched her neck and trotted out into the
-meadow. The fat whistler on the high rock chuckled
-and his beady eyes twinkled brightly as he watched her.
-The sun wheeled higher, warming the grass, drinking
-up the dew. The black mare wandered down the
-meadow. She came to a halt near a sharp ledge which
-broke off into Shadow Canyon. From the blue depths
-rose the roar of Crazy River. Lady Ebony stirred uneasily.
-A feeling of deep unrest filled her, an urge to run
-far, to seek other horses. After a time she wandered back
-into the meadow and began feeding, but she jerked up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-her head often, listening, staring into the twilight of the
-spruce.</p>
-
-<p>A few yards from where the black mare fed, a little
-hill lifted semibarren, yellow clay. It stood in sharp contrast
-to the lushness of the green meadow. On this round
-knob a prairie-dog town was located. The main section
-of the village was a busy scene, with dogs moving, bellies
-close to the ground, in quick sprints from one grass patch
-to another or romping through the meadow grass. Sam
-had brought several pairs of dogs to the mesa. He liked
-the busy little fellows and had been lonesome until he
-had a town started. The dogs posted sentinels but they
-could not see far. The dog sentinels depended on the
-yellowbelly. They listened for his blasting whistle of
-warning.</p>
-
-<p>One of the sentinels sat on a mound. His short tail
-jerked, but no other part of him moved. Suddenly the
-air was split by the warning whistle of the big sentinel
-on the high rock. The dog sentinels repeated the warning
-in a wild chorus of “skr-skrr’s.” Dogs raced in from the
-meadow. They paused for a moment to sit upright on
-their mounds, then they went down their slides to the
-tunnels below the ground. Out from the ground came
-their defiant voices, “squit-tuck! squit-tuck!”</p>
-
-<p>A lank coyote stepped out of a clump of rose brier
-close to the spruce woods. He stood gazing disgustedly
-over the meadow, his green eyes watching the yellowbellies
-as they romped to their dens at the base of the
-castle rocks. The whistlers had warned the dogs and
-ground squirrels of his presence. He ran at a lope across
-the meadow. Lady Ebony snorted and shook her head
-as he passed. Her eyes followed the glinting sun on his
-fur. When he had vanished down the trail which led into
-Shadow Canyon she returned to her feeding.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="ii" id="ii"></a>2. Wild Horse</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">High up</span> under the snow rims, where the grass was short
-but rich with moss and lichens, lay a little lake. Its upper
-shore line was formed by a barren rockslide which tumbled
-down from the naked cliffs above timber line, its
-lower edge was fringed with spruce and balsam. Below
-the lake nestled a little meadow. On this meadow fed a
-band of twenty horses.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of this band of wild horses ran a chestnut
-stallion, a heavy-chested, thick-legged fellow with a
-splashed white star in his forehead. His protruding eyes
-were set wide apart and his heavy jaws and massive neck
-showed his battling qualities, while his wide chest and
-thick barrel indicated great strength.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stud moved restlessly as he fed, jerking
-up his head, listening, testing the air with flaring nostrils.
-The mares with their colts close beside them cropped
-the short grass, content to let him keep a wary watch
-for danger.</p>
-
-<p>And there was danger ahead on every trail. There
-was the lank cougar whose desire for colt flesh was
-greater than any urge in his tawny body except the hot
-flames that fired him when the mating call floated up
-through the twilight under the high spruce. There was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-the wolf pack, not so dangerous in summer but always
-ready to kill. The chestnut stallion knew that at this season
-the old lobos would be running with their sons and
-daughters in bachelor packs. They were training their
-young to kill and would attack any colt or mare that
-strayed far from the band. There was the bear gone
-killer, the brute who had deserted his vegetable diet and
-turned killer. He was not a common enemy, but one that
-was terrible in savage lust for slaughter. Lastly, there
-was the most dreaded enemy of all, man.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut had learned that man was the most ruthless
-and dangerous of the killers. He walked upright
-and his eyes were in front of his head, not at the side
-as in animals who do not kill but are pursued by the
-killers. The ranchers did not like wild horses because
-they ate the range grass and often crossed with the ranch
-mares, who then brought forth scrubby, worthless colts,
-mean and useless as saddle stock. The chestnut stallion
-stole mares from the range when he could coax or drive
-them from their pastures. With savage daring he led his
-band into the tall-grass range in the summer. If the
-cowboys with their rifles hunted him too persistently
-he faded away to a distant range down in the desert. In
-this he was like the lobo wolf. When poison and traps
-and guns become too evident an old lobo shifts his range.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion had begun to feel that it was
-time for him to lead his band out of the Crazy Kill country.
-He was being steadily hunted. Rifles spat in the
-misty dawn, riders swooped down on the mares when
-they came out into the open to feed. Major Howard had
-given orders to kill or run the wild band off his range.
-He wanted no crossing of his good stock. At first he
-had played with the idea of having the chestnut stud
-brought in alive, but his riders could not trap or outrun
-the big fellow in the rough, broken country. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-were too many avenues of escape, too many canyons and
-tangled mats of down timber. So the major gave the order
-to shoot the big stud and to exterminate his band.</p>
-
-<p>The steady drives and constant ambushes had thinned
-the ranks of the band from thirty to twenty mares. The
-big stallion was ready to leave the tall-grass country. He
-jerked up his head and snorted shrilly, then he circled
-the herd at a fast trot. When he had gone once around it
-he halted and stood listening, rigid, his head up, his
-mane flowing in the wind. He heard a rock rattle from a
-trail above; then he saw a man. The man was on foot and
-he was toiling upward, a pack strapped on his back. He
-did not seem to be interested in the band of wild horses,
-but the wind carried a strong man smell to the meadow.
-The scent was rank with the odor of an old pipe.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion laid back his ears and bared his
-teeth. With a shrill warning he lunged at the rump of the
-nearest mare. She whinnied with fright as she galloped
-away. The stallion drove the other mares into a thundering
-stampede. They charged across the meadow and into
-the timber, the colts bounding along at their mothers’
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they were in deep cover the chestnut took
-the lead. He headed up a steep trail and did not stop until
-the band had reached a saddle in the snow range. Here
-he halted to let the mares and colts blow. The colts shouldered
-against their mothers, their pink noses and lips
-reaching under sweat-streaked flanks in search of milk.
-Their curly tails bobbed and jerked as they drank. The
-mares looked up at the snow peaks out of big, calm eyes.
-They were used to the sudden frenzied retreats of the big
-stallion, but they never became as excited as he, except
-when rifles spat and men raced shouting upon them.</p>
-
-<p>After the rest spell the chestnut led the band down
-along a wooded ridge. He kept to deep cover so that an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-enemy posted on a peak or bare rim could not see the
-moving mares and colts. Toward midafternoon he halted
-the band in a little meadow to feed. The mares and colts
-began pulling the long grass eagerly. They were aware
-that the rest period might be short, and wanted to get
-their bellies filled as quickly as possible. They were right.
-The big stallion allowed time for but half a meal. He did
-not want them heavy and sleepy from overfeeding.</p>
-
-<p>They moved down the mountain toward the deep, blue
-slash which was Shadow Canyon. The chestnut halted at
-the edge of a wide meadow. His protruding eyes had
-sighted a little cabin at the upper end of the meadow. He
-was about to lead his band back into the spruce when he
-saw a black mare standing with head up and ears pricked
-forward. He heard the blast of a whistler sounding a general
-alarm, and his ears flattened. The whistlers always
-annoyed him. He liked to move through the woods unnoticed
-and unheralded. But he remained at the edge of
-the timber watching the black mare, his nostrils twitching
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>No one came out of the cabin. The stallion pawed and
-whinnied low. His call was answered by the black mare.
-There was eagerness in her whinny. The chestnut cast
-caution aside. Here was a sleek and slender mare he
-could add to his band. He trotted out into the meadow,
-neck arched, red mane floating in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony stood for a moment looking at the chestnut
-stallion, then she arched her neck and kicked her
-heels high. With a toss of her head she trotted toward
-him. They met in the center of the meadow with the
-mares watching out of calm, uninterested eyes. The
-mares fell to feeding while the colts bucked and bounced.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the noses of the two horses met, then
-the black mare whirled and lashed out at the stallion with
-her trim hoofs. He dodged and whinnied shrilly. Lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-Ebony broke and ran down the meadow with the stallion
-thundering after her. He laid back his ears and charged
-with all his speed, but the flying black mare was faster.
-She pulled easily away from him and the sight of her
-slim body slipping away made the big stallion scream
-savagely. Never before had a mare been able to outrun
-him, to slip away from him with ease.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that she was leaving the big fellow behind,
-Lady Ebony whirled and halted, her front feet on a little
-hummock of grass. She waited until he was almost upon
-her, then she dodged past him and raced toward the
-mares. Again she outran him easily.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut was filled with a wild desire to drive this
-fleet mare into his band and lead her away. He swerved
-and charged. She dodged and leaped past him. Lady
-Ebony was not trying to escape, she was giving play to
-the pulsing life within her. The coming of the chestnut
-stallion was something she had expected. She had been
-restless and nervous; now that restlessness was gone and
-she was filled with surging energy.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut raced around the meadow again, trying to
-overtake Lady Ebony. He finally halted and stood with
-heaving sides. There was a savage light in his protruding
-eyes. Lady Ebony trotted toward him and stood nickering
-softly. She wanted to run some more. But the big stallion
-knew he was beaten. He was aware that he had made
-a great deal of noise, and noise was likely to bring riders
-with rifles. He turned and began driving his band off the
-meadow.</p>
-
-<p>As they trotted toward the narrow trail leading down
-into Shadow Canyon, Lady Ebony tossed her head and
-trotted after the band. The big stallion lunged at her with
-bared teeth. She humped her back and jigged up and
-down, warning him that if he nipped her she would lash
-out at him. He reached out to snap at her flanks and was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-met by two small hoofs which smashed against his wide
-chest. With a snort he leaped aside. He did not lunge at
-her again. She was much to his liking, a fighter and a
-swift runner.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony fell in with the mares and the band moved
-down into the deep, green twilight of the canyon. They
-kept going until they reached the bottom. There they
-paused, crowding to the edge of the river, thrusting their
-muzzles into the cold water foaming over the rocky bed.</p>
-
-<p>When the horses had drunk their fill they moved on
-down the canyon. Several miles of fast moving brought
-them to a high wall of red cliffs. Here Crazy River turned
-east and the canyon deepened. The chestnut sent the
-band up a trail which switchbacked and looped up out of
-the depths. With bared teeth and smashing hoofs he
-shoved the band up the trail and onto a mesa. Out on flat
-ground he let them rest. He was heading toward the
-desert where they would be free of attack from armed
-riders.</p>
-
-<p>The mares fed on the bunch grass which carpeted the
-mesa. They kept well together and jerked up their heads,
-whinnying to their colts when the little ones strayed.
-There was danger in each adventurous trip the colts
-made, for they had not yet learned to watch and to listen.
-This broken country was the natural home of the
-cougar. It was also the den area for the gray wolves.
-When the colts trotted too far, their mothers followed
-and herded them back.</p>
-
-<p>Above the mesa towered the snow peaks of the Crazy
-Kill Range. The snowbanks were not so close as they had
-been that morning, but seen through the high, thin air
-they seemed to be brooding no more than a short canter
-above the tableland. To the south, seen through a forest
-of trees and leaves much lighter green than the spruce,
-lay the desert, flat, eroded, purple in the evening light.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
-The meadow was bordered on the lower side by an aspen
-grove. When the wind came up out of the canyon, the
-aspens seemed to shudder. A cross made of aspen wood
-had once been lifted on Calvary, so the preachers and
-the circuit rider said; possibly the aspens remembered.
-They quaked and their round leaves rattled and rustled
-like a million tiny cymbals. Below the aspen belt lay the
-scrub oaks, stunted trees with twigs as tough and hard as
-iron.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion felt safer here on the edge of the
-wild, high country. A short run would take his band into
-the scrub oaks where no rider could follow without dismounting.</p>
-
-<p>The sun dipped downward and hung on the blue rim
-of the western horizon. It looked like a huge ball of red
-fire. Slowly it settled from sight. Then shafts of red and
-gold light radiated upward, filling the sky and the air
-with a bloody haze. The wind died down and silence settled
-over the aspen grove. For a short space the world
-was aflame, then the sunset cooled and steel-blue dusk
-crept up out of the big canyon. The round moon, which
-had been dimmed to faint paleness by the sunset, flooded
-the mesa with soft light.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut moved close to Lady Ebony. He nickered
-low. She tossed her head, and they were off on a wild
-gallop around the meadow. They ran through the moonlight,
-disregarding rocks and gopher holes, leaping over
-sage clumps and patches of buckbrush, their manes and
-tails billowing in the wind, their rushing bodies surging
-with power. They circled the meadow twice. Lady Ebony
-easily keeping ahead of the big stallion.</p>
-
-<p>After the second round, the black mare swerved and
-raced to a high, jutting point. Here she halted and the
-chestnut charged up beside her. He pawed and shook his
-head, then reared on his hind legs and his powerful forefeet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-curved under him. When his forefeet settled to the
-ground, Lady Ebony moved closer to him, her shoulder
-pressing against his muscled chest. The chestnut nickered
-proudly.</p>
-
-<p>From an aspen stand below the feeding mares leaped
-five shadowy gray forms. They ran with long leaps, their
-black muzzles lifting and falling with an even, graceful
-flow of motion. Red tongues lolled over white fangs and
-yellow eyes flamed in the moonlight. From shaggy chests
-came eager yelps. The chestnut blasted a shrill warning
-to the mares, but the wolves did not swerve to attack the
-colts. They raced across the mesa, running for the pure
-joy of giving play to their stringy muscles.</p>
-
-<p>At the lower edge of the meadow they startled an old
-doe who had come out of the aspens to feed. One of the
-gray killers turned in along the edge of the woods, the
-others fanned out and their eager yelps changed to a
-chorus of savage howls. The old lobo at their head had
-sounded the cry of the kill.</p>
-
-<p>The startled mule deer doubled her slim legs under her
-and bounded. She landed many yards down the slope,
-and bounded again. Her white rump patch flashed in the
-silvery light as she fled. Three of the wolves raced after her
-while two turned right and leaped away around the hill.
-The doe reached the edge of the mesa and bounded down
-the steep slope at a pace which rapidly outdistanced her
-pursuers. When they were out of sight she swerved and
-ran around the hill. She intended to return to her feed
-ground by doubling back, a trick used by both mule deer
-and big rabbits. She broke out on the mesa a little below
-where she had been feeding when the killers startled her.
-Behind her she could hear the faint yelping of the three
-following lobos. She suddenly planted her feet and tried
-to pivot so she could plunge back down the hill. Two
-savage, grinning killers had appeared, one a little above<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-her and one a little below. They were cutting in on her
-as fast as they could leap over the brush and rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The doe whirled back down the slope, but before she
-had taken three jumps she was met by the three killers
-who had stayed on her trail. They were fanned out, running
-well apart. She slid to a halt and turned to run
-around the hill, but she was too late. The killers swarmed
-over her, the two attacking wolves leaping in at almost
-the same instant. She went down bleating and kicking.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the night was filled with the snarling
-and growling of the feeding pack. Up on the ledge Lady
-Ebony crowded closer to the big stallion. He snorted defiantly
-and rubbed his head against hers.</p>
-
-<p>That night the wild horses stayed on the mesa. The
-next day Lady Ebony loped down into the desert, one of
-the wild band, a willing member of the chestnut stallion’s
-harem. They traveled at an easy lope which their tough
-bodies could hold for many hours. They halted in little
-meadows to feed and sought streams and water holes
-when they were thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>As they moved into the canyon-slotted, eroded world
-of the desert they left the clear streams behind, and had
-to depend upon the knowledge of the chestnut stallion or
-one of the old mares for the location of pools and springs.
-The grass was shorter, curly buffalo and gamma, growing
-in clumps that defied shifting sand and hot wind.</p>
-
-<p>The world changed quickly. The spruce, the aspens,
-and even the scrub oak vanished and in its place there
-was juniper&mdash;dry, defiant of the heat, sending its roots
-deep into the yellow earth, down cracks in the sand rock.
-The canyons were walled with red and yellow sandstone.
-The washes were bedded deep with sand instead of
-water, and the wind made the sand creep along, piling it
-into the dunes on the mesas, knifing it out in drifts from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-the ledges of rimrock. The days were hot and dry, but
-the nights were cool to the point of chillness.</p>
-
-<p>From sentinel buttes or rims they sometimes sighted
-copper-skinned Navajos riding always at a gallop, on
-lean, bony ponies. The Navajos were always hurrying,
-though they had no place to go and all eternity to get
-there in. Once Lady Ebony sighted a summer hogan with
-two Navajo women and four children sitting in the shade
-of a canopy of dry leaves and cottonwood branches. The
-women were patiently slipping colored thread across a
-loom, back and forth, back and forth, one thread above
-another. Below the hogan a sad-looking band of sheep
-and goats cropped at the short grass.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion snorted angrily when he smelled
-the grass where the sheep had been. He did not like
-sheep taint. He led the band far from the pasture lands
-of that Navajo family.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iii" id="iii"></a>3. Horse Thief</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Sam’s</span> claim was not a gold strike or a bonanza. It was a
-pocket, very definite, and
-<a name="certainly" id="certainly"></a><ins title="Original has 'cerainly'">certainly</ins>
-limited in the amount
-of gravel and black sand which carried much fine and
-some coarse gold. Sam knew its extent and its possibilities.
-He had kept its location a careful secret. It was not
-legally staked, for in staking it he would have brought a
-swarm of gold seekers to the ridge, and he wanted this
-country to himself. He would take out enough to buy the
-black mare plus enough to buy supplies for the winter.
-When he finished there would still be gold left, a sort of
-bank account to be hoarded against the coming seasons.</p>
-
-<p>For three weeks Sam shoveled and panned. At last he
-had enough yellow dust in his buck-hide pouch. He carefully
-buried his shovel, pick, and pan under a pile of
-rocks, covered his workings, and faced down the ridge.</p>
-
-<p>As he trudged slowly through the fields of columbine
-and mountain lupine, he smiled softly to himself. The
-major would be completely flabbergasted. Sam laughed
-aloud, startling a cocky jay. The gaily dressed fellow
-fluffed his feathers and his purple crest bristled. He burst
-into a volley of angry chattering as he hopped about in a
-young balsam tree.</p>
-
-<p>“Got a right to ha-ha,” Sam said aloud. “The ol’ glory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-hole come through with five hunnert an’ some extra fer
-grub. Left me a bit fer seed, too.” He continued to
-chuckle as he tramped along.</p>
-
-<p>He trudged on until he could see his mesa through the
-red trunks of the spruce. Breaking out at the edge of the
-meadow he halted and stood looking over the familiar
-scene. Every detail was so familiar to him that he seemed
-to be entering a room where he had lived a long time.
-The old yellowbelly whistler sounded a blasting warning
-and plunged from his high perch. Ground squirrels
-romped to their dens. On the semibarren little hill the
-dogs began scolding, “squit-tuck! squit-tuck!” Sam
-grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Yuh ol’ fool, don’t yuh go makin’ me out no enemy,”
-he said aloud.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes moved eagerly up and down the meadow,
-then he whistled a few high notes. There was no answering
-pound of hoofs. The black mare must be at the far
-end of the mesa.</p>
-
-<p>“Must be off cattin’ around,” he mumbled as he shuffled
-to his cabin door.</p>
-
-<p>Before Sam entered the cabin the old whistler discovered
-his mistake. He sounded an all-clear whistle and the
-meadow came to life. Sam dropped down on his old chair
-to watch the busy scene. After a time he got to his feet
-and pulled the latch thong. The door swung inward protestingly.
-Everything was as he had left it, except that
-a wandering cowboy had stopped and made himself a
-pot of tea and fried a snack of bacon. Sam knew, because
-the skillet was carefully washed and polished and
-the cracked teapot was washed and turned upside down
-on the table.</p>
-
-<p>Sam shuffled about the cabin peering at the familiar
-things within its walls. He finally built a fire. He was
-hungry for oven biscuits and stove-cooked coffee.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He was poking the pine-knot fire to high heat when a
-voice from the open door made him turn. His faded eyes
-lighted up eagerly as he saw Major Howard standing
-there. The major had a grim set to his eyes and his mustache
-bristled angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on out, Sam,” he said gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>“Howdy, major,” Sam said. He began to chuckle. Might
-as well spring the big surprise right away. Then he saw
-that there were two men with the major, men wearing
-nickel-plated stars on the flaps of their wool shirts. He
-blinked his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Howdy, sheriff,” he said. He barely knew Sheriff Miller,
-had met him only a couple of times.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Sam,” the major broke in harshly, “come clean.
-What did you do with that Lady Ebony horse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?” Sam stared at the major.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” the major snapped. “You took an awful fancy to
-that filly, wanted to buy her. You’ve been away a long
-spell. I brought the sheriff up here, so you better talk and
-talk fast.” The major’s face was beginning to redden as
-his anger rose.</p>
-
-<p>Sam looked from one man to the other, slowly, his gaze
-searching their faces. Yes, they were in earnest. A horse
-thief? Bony fingers pulled at his straggling beard. This
-wasn’t the way men did, it wasn’t square shooting. He
-did not pause to consider that Major Howard was not a
-born western mountainman. He stared defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“So yuh came up here to make me out a hoss thief?”</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff stepped forward and spoke gruffly to the
-major. “I’m not here, Howard, to help you badger this old
-coot. You swore out a warrant for his arrest. I’m here to
-serve it.” He turned to Sam. “Get whatever you want to
-take along. This warrant calls for your arrest&mdash;charge is
-stealing one black mare.”</p>
-
-<p>Sam blinked and his eyes shifted to the sheriff’s face.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
-In all his life the law had never laid a hand on him. He
-had had some experiences of his own with horse thieves.
-When he caught a man with the goods he handled the
-affair himself. And claim jumpers were met and dealt
-with according to a man’s rights. He rubbed his bony
-fingers together. He could explain, he could even take
-the sheriff to his hidden claim, he could produce the
-pouch of dust. But it wasn’t the right of any man to ask
-where he had been or what he had been doing. Besides,
-the claim wasn’t staked and if fools who didn’t know
-pockets and glory holes saw that ground there’d be a
-rush and the whole ridge would be turned upside down.
-His eyes glinted brightly as he turned toward his door.</p>
-
-<p>He backed past the table and one hand lifted to the
-belt hanging from its willow peg. His gnarled fingers
-closed around the familiar butt of his forty-five Colt. The
-gun slid down and snuggled against his hip. Then he
-shuffled toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Get! Get&mdash;afore I blast yuh!” he whispered hoarsely as
-he stepped into the sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>The deputy saw the gun first. He came to life with a
-jerk and his hand shot down to his own gun. Sam shot
-from the hip. His aim wasn’t steady; the black muzzle
-wavered a little because Sam’s old eyes couldn’t see clearly.
-Black-powder smoke billowed in a blue-white cloud,
-filling the doorway. Through the smoke Sam saw the
-deputy double over, then pitch forward. He was swinging
-his gun around to bring it down on the major when
-the sheriff’s boot shot upward and sent it spinning from
-his hand. The officer’s voice out through the smoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you got something to answer for, you old coot!”</p>
-
-<p>He stepped forward and a heavy hand dropped upon
-Sam’s shoulder. He was jerked forward and in less than
-a minute his wrists were handcuffed together. He stood
-silently watching the sheriff and the major plug the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-deputy’s wound. The man was weak and sick, but he was
-alive.</p>
-
-<p>The major straightened and glared at Sam. He had
-never intended to have the old fellow jailed, he merely
-wanted to scare him into revealing what he had done
-with the black mare. Sam’s reaction irritated and puzzled
-him. Now the old fool could take whatever the law
-handed him; the major made up his mind to that.</p>
-
-<p>Sheriff Miller had a different slant on the affair. He was
-a mountainman himself. All his life he had dealt with
-cowhands and miners. He recognized that Sam was acting
-as most of them would act under the same conditions.
-He blamed himself because he had thought Sam too old
-to have any fire left.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not too proud of this job,” he said sourly to the
-major.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better do your duty,” the major snapped.</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff nodded his head. He turned to Sam.</p>
-
-<p>“Now get what you want. We’re going. I’ll go into the
-cabin with you just to make sure you don’t try anything
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t reckon I need anything,” Sam answered.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="iv" id="iv"></a>4. Desert Winter</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Life</span> for the wild horses in the desert was a never-ending
-battle for food, for protection, and for the chance to slip
-through the gray dawn to a water hole where eager muzzles
-could be thrust into murky, yellow water. The chestnut
-stallion was a hard but wise leader. He knew that
-man controlled the best of the grazing lands, that
-mounted riders patrolled the foothills and the deep valleys
-back against the mountains. He had only savage disdain
-for the geldings and mares who submitted to man’s
-saddle and steel bit. No patriot ever cherished his freedom
-more than the chestnut stallion.</p>
-
-<p>In the desert there were Indian hunters to be watched
-for. The Navajo people were not like the whites in their
-way of life. They were wandering nomads, following
-their herds, never making a home in any permanent spot.
-In summer they built branch-covered shelters. In the
-winter they crowded into log and mud hogans. They
-were children of the wild, untamed desert, as cunning as
-the gray lobo. The Navajo had strange customs. Among
-them the women owned the sheep, the goats, the hogan
-and the children. The men owned the horses, and the
-hunting weapons, along with the turquoise jewelry they
-wore. Horses to a Navajo were the same as gold to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-white man, they were his measure of wealth and standing.
-So the Navajo men stalked the wild bands, capturing
-colts and mares to add to their wealth.</p>
-
-<p>The Navajos knew every water hole in the desert. Like
-the tawny cougar and the savage lobo, they knew the
-wild bands must drink, that sooner or later they must slip
-down to the water hole. So they stalked them near the
-water holes and swarmed after them, riding in relays,
-keeping the band moving, keeping them from drinking or
-resting.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stud considered all these things in his
-own way and met the problems with sharp wits, keen
-eyes, and keener sense of smell, keeping a constant, alert
-watch for enemies. He kept his band in the broken country
-where mesas dropped away in sheer, steep slopes to
-the depths of the sand washes. From the top of such a
-mesa the band could easily thunder down into a canyon
-at a moment’s warning.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony accepted the hard life. She liked the sudden,
-wild charges, the long runs under the white stars,
-the savage freedom which was so costly. When the chestnut
-stallion sounded the alarm she always led the rushing
-charge, flying ahead of the reaching, pounding hoofs of
-the mares and colts, slowing her speed to allow them to
-overtake her. The band foraged for grass at dawn or in
-the first grayness of dusk, coming out of a canyon to
-spread over the mesatop. Then as she pulled the scant
-grass she remembered the high mountain mesa where the
-grass grew knee-deep and cold, crystal streams rushed
-over gleaming rocks. She remembered the red and the
-yellow and the purple flowers, the solid masses of blue
-lupine, the flaming orange of acres of daisies.</p>
-
-<p>This silent, terrible land was in such sharp contrast to
-the mountain country that the chestnut’s desire for it
-seemed foolish to her. Fear of man grew but slowly within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-her. Man had always been her friend and protector.
-Sam with his lumps of sugar and his petting, Tex riding
-up in the fall with the rest of the major’s boys to take her
-down to the winter pastures. The savage anger of the big
-stallion when he smelled man scent, the mad charge
-down the rocky slopes, these were confusing to her, but
-she accepted them and began to snort and shake her
-head when the scent came to her.</p>
-
-<p>The desert was a mass of broken mesas, eroded hills,
-and deep-gutted canyons. There were many rivers, but
-no water. The eyes of the band could see far, but the
-scene was the same always. And yet this vast world was
-filled with a silence that was calm and restful. The desert
-was a canvas of shifting, changing color. Under the
-white-hot glare of the day the reds and yellows flamed.
-At dawn and at sunset it was purple and mauve and steel
-blue. And always to the north stood the shining mountains,
-etched blue against the sky, with the white snow
-line gleaming like a crown above the deep blue of the
-forests. Lady Ebony often stood and stared through the
-haze at the ragged outline of the Crazy Kill Range.</p>
-
-<p>Summer slipped past, and fall rains woke the short
-grass to life, a brief and hurried growth before the cold
-and the snow came. The wild ones cropped avidly, pulling
-the tender shoots from their crowns, tasting them
-eagerly before swallowing them. The chestnut stallion
-kept the band moving south, down off the higher benches
-to the deeper canyons where blizzards would not rage so
-fiercely.</p>
-
-<p>Indian summer slipped away and the purple mists
-lifted from the cathedral rocks and the spires of the ship
-rocks. The air cleared and the mornings were cold, with
-white frost covering the ground. The colts frisked and
-bucked and raced in little circles until the sun warmed
-their shaggy coats. Even the mares became spirited when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-the white frost was on them. Lady Ebony slipped into
-the slower, less wild way of the mares. She did not run
-except when the band took alarm, but she still ran at the
-head of the thundering herd.</p>
-
-<p>One day a wind came down out of the north. It carried
-fine snowflakes which swirled along the ground and
-curled upward on the lee side of rocks. Toward night the
-storm thickened until it became a driving blizzard riding
-a shrieking wind. The horses turned their tails to the lash
-of the storm and drifted slowly south, led by one of the
-old mares. That night they bunched close together in a
-deep canyon. They crowded under a projecting lip of
-sandstone where the wind and the snow did not strike
-them. Fine white particles sifted down, covering their
-shaggy coats and making them look like white horses as
-they stood with their heads down waiting for the blizzard
-to blow itself out.</p>
-
-<p>The shelter they had found had been formed centuries
-before by the action of wind and water on the layers of
-rock forming the crust of the desert. The upper layer was
-hard and did not weather away as fast as the lower layers.
-Thus a great, projecting roof was formed with a ceiling
-that sloped back under the cliff. A thousand years earlier,
-brown men had passed that way. They had halted in the
-bed of the canyon and looked up at the great cave. They
-had held a council and decided to build a city under the
-rim.</p>
-
-<p>Those brown cliff dwellers had built houses of hewn
-stone, room upon room, like apartments. Their masonry
-still stood, back under the rim. The ceremonial kivas built
-under the ground in circular form with laced log roofs
-had caved in but the tiers of houses stood against the cliff,
-their open windows staring into the canyon. The brown
-men had vanished, down into the canyon, south toward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-the plains, and west toward the great ocean, but their
-homes remained.</p>
-
-<p>The wild horses saw the houses piled story upon story,
-the staring windows and the heaps of broken pottery
-decorated with strange designs. They were not afraid of
-the dead houses because the man smell had long since
-vanished, carried away by the wind and the heat, toward
-the south and the west.</p>
-
-<p>At night an old lobo wolf halted his bachelor pack on
-a high rim above the ancient city. The wind lashed and
-tore at the gray bodies as though trying to tear them from
-the rocky cliff. The old lobo bared his fangs and lifted his
-muzzle. He sounded a savage paean of howls and high,
-dismal calls and his sons joined in the chorus. Their howls
-rang down the wind curling along the face of the cliff to
-where the wild horses stood. The mares jerked up their
-heads, and the big chestnut snorted savagely. But the
-howls of the pack had none of the savage cry of the kill.
-The gray ones were defying the storm, daring it to sweep
-them from their lofty crag. They were answering an age-old
-urge to challenge the elements, to dare them to do
-their worst. After a while the old lobo led his sons in a
-wild chase down the ridge. They leaped along, riding the
-fierce wind, snapping and snarling eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>For two days the wild band remained under the rim;
-then the blizzard broke and the sun struggled through
-the gray clouds to shine feebly into the canyon. The
-mares moved out and began pawing among the tumbled
-rocks, digging for grass. They scooped the new snow and
-swallowed it to wet their throats. Above them, against
-the turquoise sky, a pair of buzzards wheeled and circled,
-their round, hard eyes peering down hungrily, watching
-the horses, eager to see if any showed signs of weakness.
-The undertakers of the air would follow the band daily,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-hoping the cold and the scant feed would bring death to
-some of the band.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion met the rigors of winter with the
-same disdain he held for hunters. The colts were watched
-more closely because the snow and the cold had driven
-the natural food of the cougar and the wolves to cover.
-Many of the little dwellers were curled up in deep, warm
-burrows sleeping. Most of the birds had flown south. But
-the big killers did not sleep. Winter was a time when
-hunger and famine stalked their world, when they ran
-for days with lean, gaunt bellies driving them on. The
-hunger which cramped their stomachs made them savage
-and daring, it sharpened their cunning, and made their
-raids more deadly.</p>
-
-<p>One evening a hungry colt strayed from the band, seeking
-a spot where the snow was not so deep. His mother
-was busy pawing through a drift where she had located a
-clump of bushes with tender twigs in abundance. The
-colt wandered up to a stand of juniper which stood
-sprawled against the snow. He dug down experimentally,
-found no curly buffalo grass and moved on, farther up
-the slope, closer to the green trees.</p>
-
-<p>He was pawing into a drift when he heard a savage
-snarling. He jerked up his head and snorted, his round
-eyes staring with fright. Out of the juniper woods leaped
-four gray wolves. Their broad chests rose above the snow,
-spraying it aside in fine spurts. Their red tongues rolled
-between their bared fangs. The pack was lean and gaunt,
-but they did not sound the cry of the kill, they ran silently,
-emitting low snarls.</p>
-
-<p>The colt whirled and floundered toward the mares. The
-chestnut stallion was the first to see the wolves. With a
-squeal of rage he charged toward them. The colt plunged
-along but he had wandered far from the band. Behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-him the killers rapidly closed in. Their white fangs
-slashed the muscles and tendons of his straining legs,
-hamstringing him. He went down plunging and kicking,
-and the gray killers leaped upon him ripping and tearing.</p>
-
-<p>At the sound of the chestnut’s shrill warning the mares
-jerked up their heads and charged to the rescue of the
-struggling colt. Lady Ebony leaped ahead close beside
-the big stallion. For a moment the wolves stood their
-ground, then they faded back, snarling and howling, to
-circle around the band. The mares milled and stamped
-around the colt while his mother nosed him and whinnied
-eagerly. He kicked a little, then lay still.</p>
-
-<p>In the sky above the buzzards shortened their circles
-and dropped. Their long wait had been rewarded. The
-mares kept a close guard around the carcass of the colt for
-a long time. The wolves sat on the snow and stared out of
-flaming yellow eyes, waiting with slaver-flecked jaws,
-sure they would feast in due time. They looked up at the
-buzzards now sweeping low above the snow and growled
-defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>The frantic mother kept nosing her colt, trying to get
-him to his feet so that she could lead him away from the
-blood smell and the wolf taint. The chestnut charged the
-wolves many times. They leaped away before his lashing
-hoofs, darting behind him, jumping at his legs and heels.
-And the buzzards settled down on the snow to wait.</p>
-
-<p>The mares guarded the dead colt for over an hour, then
-they moved away leaving the mother alone. She remained
-standing over the twisted carcass, whinnying nervously.
-Then the killers leaped in and circled around her, darting
-toward her, two behind and two in front. She lashed at
-them, pivoted, kicked wildly, her pounding hoofs striking
-nothing. The chestnut stallion came to her rescue and
-drove the wolves away, then he drove her down the slope<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-to where the band was feeding. She went slowly, halting
-to stand with her head up and nicker softly. The wolves
-leaped on the carcass and began devouring it while the
-buzzards walked over the snow, halting with their necks
-stretched out, their hard eyes glittering. They must wait
-for their share, which would be the gnawed bones.</p>
-
-<p>And so the battle against the snow and the cold went
-on through the long winter. Another colt was lost to the
-gray killers, and an old mare went lame. She dropped behind
-in spite of the savage nipping and crowding of the
-big stallion. That night she bedded down alone in a little
-canyon and a gaunt cougar came upon her in the gray
-dawn. Her end came swiftly, without a struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Then spring came with rushing torrents, slush in the
-arroyos, and slick, yellow mud on the hillsides. Streams
-boiled out of the dry canyons thick with raw clay and
-sand. This was the season when nature carved deeply
-into the face of the desert. Only the sand washes and the
-dunes on the flats resisted the water. The sand ate it up
-and packed hard so that it did not cling and drag when
-the band galloped over it.</p>
-
-<p>With the speed of a miracle the desert bloomed. The
-sage flats flared white with the blossoms of the primrose
-and the mariposa lily. Countless other stunted plants put
-forth flowers, eager to create and ripen seed before the
-heat and drought of summer came. And the grass shot out
-of the ground, rich and sweet. The band cropped and
-moved on, ever searching for taller grass.</p>
-
-<p>The mares were lean and gaunt, their ribs pushing
-ridges up under their shedding coats. The chestnut stallion
-was lean, too, but in a hard-muscled way. Lady
-Ebony had lost much of her fire and love for frolic. The
-sun was warm and the air soft but she needed rest. She
-looked away toward the white slopes of the Crazy Kill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-Range. Spring would not reach the high mesa for another
-month, but she was restless. She would have headed away
-into the foothills but the big stallion kept close watch
-over his band.</p>
-
-<p>One day a horseman rode out on a rim. He sat on his
-bony horse and looked down on the wild band feeding on
-a bench. For a long time he sat there looking intently before
-he rode away. Yellow Man smiled as he galloped toward
-his hogan. There were many good colts in the band
-and one black mare. The black mare was a horse such as
-he had never seen before, the sort of mount he had always
-dreamed about. He would tell the other men about
-the band, but the black mare was to be his because he
-had been the first to see her.</p>
-
-<p>He rode to his hogan and picketed his pony. Walking
-to the glowing fire which flickered inside the door he
-stooped and held out his hands. Four men sat along one
-wall while a half dozen brown-faced women sat on the
-other side. On the men’s side of the hogan lay riding
-things, bridles and blankets, a saddle. On the women’s
-side were the cooking pots and the blankets. Yellow Man
-sat down. For a long time he said nothing. His black eyes
-were on the fire.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Yellow Man lifted his eyes to the face of an old
-man beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen many good horses,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>The old man grunted softly while the others bent forward.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a black mare who will have a colt this spring,”
-Yellow Man said.</p>
-
-<p>They all nodded. The black mare was to belong to
-Yellow Man, that was understood. Now they waited for
-him to go on.</p>
-
-<p>“Tomorrow we will run the band. There will be horses
-for all. The big one who leads may have to be shot. I will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
-take the rifle. The big one is strong and will fight.” Yellow
-Man’s eyes returned to the fire.</p>
-
-<p>The others nodded and began eagerly planning the
-drive. Through the long winter they had kept busy with
-sings and chants, meeting with other families in religious
-dances and ceremonies. This would be the first hunt of
-the season.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To the north, behind the high gray walls of the state
-prison Sam knew when spring came. Through a high,
-barred window he could see a square of sunlight on the
-stone wall. Across the upper corner of the square drooped
-the branches of a cottonwood tree. Sam watched the buds
-swell and burst into pale-green leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The warden and the guards shook their heads when
-they walked past his cell. Eight years. The old fellow
-would be lucky to finish two of them. He refused to work
-outside, he hated even to exercise in the closed-in yard.
-He wanted to be left alone, to sit and stare out the little
-window. But Sam did not share their belief that he would
-never leave the gray walls. He was sure he would return
-to the high mesa. He wasn’t going to die cooped up in a
-gloomy cell; when he died it would be out in the open
-with his boots on, under a mountain sky.</p>
-
-<p>He did not brood over his trial. His attorney had been
-irritated to the point of anger when Sam refused to tell
-where he had been and what he was doing during the
-three weeks of absence from his cabin. That was his business;
-he’d need his cache when he got out. Nobody was
-going to find out about it. His stubbornness had convinced
-the jury of his guilt. Sam had paid the attorney
-well though the judge had offered to let the state pay the
-fee. He didn’t think much about those things, he just sat
-and stared at the cottonwood branch.</p>
-
-<p>Tex, Major Howard’s foreman, had talked to him. Tex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-understood better than any of the others, but Sam wasn’t
-trusting anybody. He had learned from years of battling
-for gold that the yellow metal was poison to friendship
-and trust. Tex was a right fine feller, but there was no call
-to push him too far.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="v" id="v"></a>5. Wild Horse Drive</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">The</span> snow had vanished and the desert was dry and
-thirsty again. Dust spurted up around the hoofs of the
-wild horses as they loped down a long ridge. The east was
-beginning to show a pale flush of red and day came
-quickly to the barren country, lighting the tall spires and
-castle rocks and the sharp points of the pinnacles, making
-the monument valley below appear alive.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion swung along behind the mares.
-At their head ran an old roan. She was trailwise and wary.
-Her nose was leading her unerringly to a big water hole
-at the base of a cliff. The others pounded along behind
-her with the colts frisking beside their mothers. The
-chestnut halted every little while to whirl and sniff the
-morning air. He held his head high and his protruding
-eyes rolled as he stared back over the broken country
-they had left behind.</p>
-
-<p>The roan trotted off the ridge and down through a
-jumble of rocks to the base of a cliff. The horses nickered
-softly as they smelled water. The roan’s muzzle was a
-scant foot from the yellow surface of the pool when wild
-yells shattered the morning calm. The band whirled and
-stood with heads up, staring toward a rocky slope.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-Above them the big chestnut screamed a warning and an
-order to charge away.</p>
-
-<p>Down the slope toward the water hole galloped four
-riders. Their naked bodies gleamed copper-red in the
-new sunlight as they bent low over the necks of their lean
-ponies. With squeals of fright the band whirled and
-charged down the canyon. A cloud of yellow dust billowed
-at their heels. The chestnut stallion crashed down
-on their flanks with bared teeth and pounding hoofs.
-When a mare lagged he drove her squealing into the
-band. The mad charge carried the wild horses away from
-the four pursuing Navajos, but the trailers did not give
-up the chase.</p>
-
-<p>Back of the dust cloud Yellow Man rode beside his
-three sons. Their faces were expressionless; only their
-black eyes showed the eager excitement that filled them.
-They did not try to make their gaunt ponies overtake the
-thundering band but were content to keep a steady pace.
-The trail left by the wild horses was broad and easy to
-follow.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony ran ahead of the band, keeping well out
-in front without effort. She was not badly frightened and
-the wild panic of the other horses had not gripped her.
-But she raced along just the same, enjoying the surging
-flight which gave full play to her powerful muscles. The
-big chestnut charged in and turned the band up the
-ridge. As they swept over the top of the rocky hill they
-saw the Indians galloping along the canyon bed below.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Man shifted his seat on the bare back of his
-pinto. His black eyes were following the flight of the
-black mare, and there was a fierce eagerness in them. The
-chestnut leader was doing just what he wanted him to do.
-The big fellow was swinging his band into a wide circle, a
-curve which would carry them back into the country they
-had just left.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The band thundered down off the ridge and headed
-up a sand wash. The drag of the sand and the uphill going
-slowed them but they kept pounding along, the stallion
-saw to that. He stayed behind and used his teeth
-savagely on the rumps of the laggards.</p>
-
-<p>Yellow Man and his sons galloped up the ridge and
-dropped into the sand wash. A thin smile parted the lips
-of the tall hunter as he noticed how fagged his horse was.
-They were chasing no ordinary wild scrub ponies. The
-chestnut stallion had trained his band well and kept them
-in fine condition. They had run the legs right out from
-under the Navajo ponies. He urged his pinto up the sand
-wash as fast as the little beast could travel.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut saw the riders coming and noticed that
-they were working their way to the side as though aiming
-to come up alongside. He suspected a trick though he was
-disdainful of the slow-running ponies coming up from
-below. He changed his course a little to the north. Now
-the pursuers would have to travel much farther than his
-band to overtake them. The Navajo riders swung north
-too, and kept following close to the dust cloud.</p>
-
-<p>The chase thus took a circular course with the chestnut
-keeping the mares moving as fast as the colts could follow.
-But now the horses’ sides were heaving, sweat was
-streaking their flanks and caking in lather-matted ridges
-above the hair. The big stallion snorted triumphantly as
-they topped a ridge. They had run away from their pursuers.
-The Indians were plodding along far behind. He
-allowed the mares to slow their pace to a lope while he
-galloped to right and then to left, looking down into
-washes and canyons for a hiding place.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the mares heard yells from their right. They
-saw five red-bronze riders charging down on them from
-a cover of junipers. Mounted on fresh horses, these braves
-came swiftly from their ambush. The chestnut stallion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-rushed on his band and sent them racing down into a
-canyon. The retreat led over a ledge and down a rocky
-hill. The slope was steep and covered with loose stones,
-but the sure-footed horses took the broken ground at a
-mad rush. One of the mares slipped and went down, rolling
-over and over, until she was stopped by a big boulder.
-She struggled to her feet and staggered around the hill.
-Her colt bounded after her nickering wildly.</p>
-
-<p>The charge of the hunters carried them close on the
-heels of the flying band. When the mare went down, two
-of the hunters swerved and followed her. The chestnut
-let her go and gave his attention to speeding the rest of
-the band. In a few seconds the speed of the wild horses
-carried them ahead of the Navajos’ lean ponies. But the
-three hunters following the mares kept yelling and galloping.</p>
-
-<p>The two hunters who had swerved to follow the crippled
-mare and her colt soon overtook them. They paid no
-attention to the mare but charged down on the colt. One
-of them swung a rope. The loop sailed out and dropped
-over the straining neck of the little fellow. The colt fought
-and kicked, but the Navajo boy knew how to handle a
-fighter. He kept his rope tight, almost to the choking
-point, and let the little horse wear himself out. In a short
-time he had mastered the colt and was heading toward
-camp with him. His companion galloped away to overtake
-the band.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut stallion could not understand the attack
-of the Navajos. They did not start shooting when they got
-in close and they did not try to rope any of the mares.
-They just kept riding on the heels of his fast-tiring band,
-yelling and waving their arms. They were not like the
-wolf or the cougar, they did not strike when they got
-close, but they never left the heels of the herd. The big<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-stallion shifted his course and again they began moving
-in a wide circle.</p>
-
-<p>This time the chestnut widened the circle, cutting back
-into the steep hill country, turning up crooked washes,
-crossing ridges, and doubling back occasionally. The
-Navajos stayed on the trail, keeping as close to the band
-as they could, cutting across when they sighted the mares
-doubling on their course. And now they were hanging
-close on the heels of the wild ones. Twice the chestnut
-stallion whirled and faced the hunters as though about to
-challenge them to a fight. The braves slid their hands
-down to where their guns hung about their naked waists.
-They did not wish to kill the big stallion unless he
-charged their ponies, nor did they care to try taming him.
-They wanted the black mare and the colts.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut did not charge his tormentors. Fear of
-man and man’s far-killing gun sent him back to biting
-and shoving the mares into faster flight. He could not use
-the tactics which always succeeded against the wolf or
-the bear.</p>
-
-<p>Topping another ridge, he headed his band into a deep
-canyon. He knew they were almost winded from running
-uphill. The steep slope would help them to recover. One
-of the Navajos shouted:</p>
-
-<p>“He is doubling back! Head him!”</p>
-
-<p>The Indians sent their ponies charging recklessly down
-the dangerous slope, leaping over boulders and water-gutted
-ditches. But the band would not be headed. Going
-downhill had eased them and given them new life.
-They plunged along with sides heaving and nostrils flaring.
-Lady Ebony led them, keeping her pace down to
-their speed.</p>
-
-<p>One of the hunters headed his pony up out of the canyon.
-He halted on a jutting rock and sat looking down
-over the desert. His black eyes watched the fine spirals of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-yellow dust rising from the canyon and he nodded his
-head. The scattered groups of hunters would be able to
-locate the new direction the band had taken.</p>
-
-<p>The sharp eyes of three hunters hiding in a juniper
-grove on the rim of the canyon saw the spirals of dust rising
-from the dry watercourse above. They slipped across
-and waited.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut began to breathe easier. Once again the
-band had outdistanced their pursuers and no raiders
-could be seen. But he was nervous and determined to
-keep the mares moving until they were deep in the rough,
-canyon-slotted country to the south. The weary horses
-slowed their pace to a trot. They were suffering for water
-and their hard muscles were crying for rest. They were
-used to sudden, wild charges when they would race at
-top speed for a while, but they were not used to a steady
-grind, hour after hour.</p>
-
-<p>Several of the mares began weaving away from the
-herd, sniffing for water, looking for a spot where they
-could halt and rest. Suddenly the yells they had come to
-dread broke the silence and echoed along the canyon
-walls. Three riders came charging toward them from below.
-The chestnut screamed a warning. For a moment he
-hesitated. There was an enemy pack behind them, and
-now one faced them. With a snort and a toss of his head
-he sent the band up the far slope out of the canyon. The
-hunters raced whooping and yelling after the mares.</p>
-
-<p>Escape from the canyon did not bring freedom from
-the worrying red riders. The desert seemed full of them.
-After every run, when the big stallion thought he had
-slipped away from his pursuers, a new and fresh band
-would charge from cover on the jaded mares. In desperation
-the big horse headed down a deep canyon. The
-mares could not travel uphill any more. They could not
-move fast but the hunters did not seem anxious to close<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-in and strike. They kept on the heels of the wild ones.
-Now there were a dozen of them and they kept up a savage
-yelling as they stayed close to the band.</p>
-
-<p>Up ahead Lady Ebony began to tire. She was not
-driven by frantic fear and she was eager to stop and rest.
-At first she had enjoyed the flight, but now she was
-thirsty and her sides were heaving. She galloped ahead,
-leaving the band behind. As she raced along she saw a
-side canyon. Its floor was solid rock, worn smooth by
-wind and water. She slipped into the narrow opening and
-halted behind a shoulder of rock. She lowered her head
-and stood blowing hard. She had left no tracks on the
-rocky floor.</p>
-
-<p>The wild horses galloped past the mouth of the side
-canyon. A great cloud of dust rolled up after them. Lady
-Ebony heard the Navajos go whooping past. She stood
-listening until the pounding of hoofs and the yelling died
-away. Shaking her head, she trotted up the narrow canyon.
-She craved water and she wanted to be alone, to lie
-down and rest. She headed north because to the north lay
-the tall-grass meadows with clear streams bubbling across
-them. She moved along steadily, keeping to the bottom of
-the canyon where she was hidden from sight of any
-black-eyed hunter who might be sitting on a rim high
-above.</p>
-
-<p>A black rain cloud billowed up above the rims to the
-north. It rolled down across the desert on the wings of a
-driving wind which raised clouds of dust and sand. At
-dusk it swept over the canyon where Lady Ebony was
-marching along steadily north. It drenched her and gave
-her needed drinking water, then it moved on down to
-where the chestnut was making his last stand.</p>
-
-<p>In the canyon the big stallion had settled down to the
-grim job of lashing his mares into movement. They were
-not able to go fast but he kept them pounding along, just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-ahead of the yelling hunters. Their gaunt bellies were
-drawn and their dry nostrils flared red inside their dust-caked
-rims. The Navajos were shouting to one another,
-their spirits high. They were sure of their catch now and
-eager to close in as soon as the mares quit.</p>
-
-<p>Then the dusk of evening came and with it the downpour
-of rain. Nowhere in the world outside the tropics
-can so much water fall in so short a time as in the desert.
-The storm was bad luck for the hunters, but it spelled
-escape for the wild horses. It blotted out everything,
-bringing sudden, inky night. Its rushing, swirling waters
-wiped out the tracks of the horses. The chestnut stallion
-played wise. He took a side canyon, forcing his charges
-out on a rocky ridge. From that canyon they crossed another
-ridge and turned north. The big stallion was headed
-out of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>The hunters spread out and worked up and down the
-canyon but the darkness and rain defeated them. They
-finally gave up and turned their ponies toward their
-camp.</p>
-
-<p>All that night Lady Ebony kept moving. The storm
-passed and the moon came out with stars beyond it, stars
-that hung low over the barren country, brilliant with red
-and blue lights winking outside white centers.</p>
-
-<p>A pair of gray wolves flashed past like shadows. They
-leaped along, side by side, shoulder to shoulder. One was
-a big, broad-chested fellow with a wide muzzle and frost-cropped
-ears. The other was a slim gray one with slender
-legs and body. They paid no attention to Lady Ebony.
-They were not hunting, they were running, answering the
-call of spring, heading for a trysting place on a barren
-ridge.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony heard them holding their spring concert
-on a high knoll. They howled and snarled and yelped.
-There was much yearning, much that sounded like deep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-laughter in their song, and there was tenderness in the
-notes of the slim gray one. In their mating time they had
-lost the savagery of winter. There was no specter of
-famine in the springtime, no blasting blizzards, no deep
-snow. There was food and there was an urge to find a
-snug den.</p>
-
-<p>Something of the feelings expressed by the gray wolves
-filled Lady Ebony. Just before dawn she halted and began
-feeding. She fed on through the morning. She saw no
-other horses and heard no savage yells. At midday she
-lay down and rested until late afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>When she moved on she headed north, toward the
-snowy ramparts of the Crazy Kill Range, and she went
-at a long, ground-devouring lope. That night she halted
-at a spring in the lower foothills. Berrybushes and willow
-grew around the spring and there was tall grass. Lady
-Ebony pulled the juicy grass contentedly. She was glad
-to be away from the teeth and smashing hoofs of the
-chestnut stallion. She did not miss the herd at all.</p>
-
-<p>The spring was so much of a change after the parched
-desert that she bedded down close beside it and rested
-until morning. With the gray dawn she was up and feeding
-on the lush grass. For several hours she fed, then she
-drank deeply and faced northward. Again she set her
-pace at a fast lope.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vi" id="vi"></a>6. Midnight</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Lady Ebony</span> held her course until late afternoon. She
-was high in the red foothills when she halted. A little
-stream bubbled over red rocks, willow grew along the
-banks, and the grass was green. On each side of the
-water red rocks rose high against the sky. Along the
-base of the cliffs lay great slabs and piles of stone, broken
-loose from the walls by wind and rain, piled in confusion
-over the floor of the wild gorge. Lady Ebony moved
-among the tumbled rocks. A bobcat bounded from a
-thicket of rose brier where he had been hunting cottontails.
-Lady Ebony snorted and shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>She kept moving slowly along the stream until she
-came to a grove of cottonwoods. Close beside the grove
-grew a dense thicket of tangled brush. Lady Ebony
-dropped her head and began pulling the tender gamma
-grass. She did not look up at the Crazy Kill Range again.
-After she had eaten her fill she drank at the stream and
-lay down.</p>
-
-<p>Sunset flamed across the sky and died into cool shadows.
-The red bluffs changed from deep purple to slate
-gray. By almost unnoticeable degrees the moon brightened
-and flooded the valley and the cliffs changed color
-to match the white light. Now they were silvery with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-bands and squares of black shadows across them. And the
-stars hung, big and white, close to the ragged tops of the
-rims.</p>
-
-<p>In this garden of red rocks close beside the little stream
-a colt was born. The morning sun beating down on the
-floor of the gorge shone on a wobbly little horse crowding
-close to Lady Ebony’s side.</p>
-
-<p>The black colt jerked his curly tail and butted his head
-against his mother’s side as he got his first breakfast. His
-legs were long and heavy-boned. They were wobbly legs
-but they showed promise of great strength. His head was
-finely molded like his mother’s, and his sleek coat was all
-black, except for a white star in his forehead. That white
-star and the heavy-boned frame were his inheritance from
-his father, the chestnut stallion.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony was proud and excited over her handsome
-jet-black colt&mdash;so black that he could well be called Midnight.
-She kept turning her head, nosing his silky rump,
-and nickering softly. She was suddenly aware of many
-things she had scarcely noticed before. She heard a rustling
-in the thicket and sniffed the warm air nervously. A
-faint odor of cat came to her and she snorted angrily. A
-few minutes later a big bobcat stepped out of the thicket
-and stood looking at her. Lady Ebony shook her head
-and stamped her feet. The bobcat opened his mouth
-wide, exposing rows of white teeth and a red tongue. He
-closed his mouth and his yellow eyes stared at the mare
-and her colt. Then he humped his sleek back and trotted
-through the sunshine across the meadow to where his
-mate was waiting for him.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the big cottonwoods a flicker hammered away
-at the trunk of the tree. Even this steady rat-a-tat bothered
-Lady Ebony. And when the flicker’s mate sailed
-down from the sky and alighted on an anthill she snorted
-again. The flicker up in the tree deserted his morning task<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-and came down to join his wife in an ant hunt. They
-danced and cavorted on the anthill, picking up the busy
-little workers as they swarmed out to repel the invasion.</p>
-
-<p>A yellowbelly whistler came down out of the rocks and
-set to feeding, sliding along the ground, sitting up to stare
-intently across the meadow, chuckling to himself as he
-munched the roots he dug up. He was joined by a pair of
-cottontail rabbits who stayed close to cover as they fed.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight finished his breakfast and began walking
-around on his wobbly legs, investigating everything he
-came to with an inquisitive, pink nose. Lady Ebony followed
-him nickering nervously. The little fellow halted
-beside a clump of rattleweed. His ears pricked forward
-and he listened. From the deep shade under the green
-leaves came a warning rattle. The buzzing sound was repeated
-as Midnight’s nose drew closer. Lady Ebony
-sprang forward and stamped upon the patch of weeds as
-she shouldered her son away from the danger spot. The
-colt had met his first enemy, a big rattler.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony showed by her actions that she considered
-Midnight an important little horse. She followed his wobbling
-course down the stream, then back again. After that
-he tried to run but his legs doubled under him and his
-body failed to do what he wanted of it. Finally he trotted
-out into the warm sun and lay down. In a few minutes he
-was sound asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony stood over him for a long time with her
-head down. Finally she set to cropping grass near where
-he slept. She knew that she must be constantly alert,
-ready to repel attack from killers that had never bothered
-her before. The morning serenade of a pair of coyotes
-above the rock garden made her nervous. Their mad
-chorus of yelping laughter and high, mournful notes
-caused her to move close to Midnight and stand there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-with head erect. The song dogs of the dawn finished their
-chorus and raced away across the meadow above.</p>
-
-<p>A great bald eagle wheeled above the tops of the red
-cliffs, his round, glassy eyes staring down on the meadow,
-his wings beating the air with powerful strokes. He saw
-the mare and her colt and his powerful beak clicked several
-times. His pinions stiffened and were held as rigid as
-the wings of a pursuit plane as he banked sharply and
-spiraled downward. He saw the black colt get to his feet
-and wander away from his mother. With a piercing
-scream he shortened his circles. His cry was answered
-from the deep blue above and a second eagle came plummeting
-down on folded wings, her body roaring through
-the thin air as she dived. She flattened her terrific plunge
-just above the red rock garden and circled with her mate.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony jerked up her head and trotted to her son.
-She tried to stand over him but he did not wish to be
-bothered at the moment. He had discovered his own
-shadow and was making a great show of challenging the
-flat, black thing following him on the ground. He tossed
-his head and laid back his ears, his furry rump bumping
-up and down a little as he threatened to kick at his
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>The eagles soared and dived over the mare and her
-colt. The kings of the air were savage killers without fear
-of any ground dweller. They had struck down fawns and
-lambs and they knew they could smash the wobbly colt
-if his mother left an opening. Midnight became more irritated
-at his mother’s close guard. He tried to lash out at
-her with his hind feet. Lady Ebony let him trot away
-from her. He halted and snorted at his shadow.</p>
-
-<p>The king of the air saw his opening and dived. His
-wings were folded tight against his sides and he dropped
-like a bolt of lightning. Close behind him came his mate.
-The attack was so swift that Lady Ebony could not reach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-the side of her son in time to shield him. The diving eagle
-spread his wings a few feet above the back of the colt.
-His heavy breastbone struck Midnight a smashing blow
-while his long talons raked deep into the tender back of
-the little horse. Midnight went down so quickly the she-eagle
-missed him entirely. The blow which had felled
-him was the same smashing stroke with which the eagle
-broke limbs from trees when building a nest. It was his
-stroke of death, but he had not gauged it as well as he
-had intended. The breastbone struck Midnight across the
-hips and not in the middle of the back where it would
-have broken him down.</p>
-
-<p>With frantic snorts and eager whinnying Lady Ebony
-nosed her son as he staggered to his feet. He crowded
-close against her, willing now to be guarded. The eagles
-rose straight up into the blue for five hundred feet before
-they leveled off. They circled and looked down, their
-screams ringing along the cliffs. Midnight stayed close to
-his mother. His rump was smarting and he felt the need
-of her strength. After a time the eagles widened their circles
-and flew away.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had learned another lesson. When Lady
-Ebony sounded a warning call he rushed to her side instead
-of humping his back and dancing up and down. He
-wanted no more raking talons in his skin. He was beginning
-to know the price of life in the wild. He was coming
-to know that the strong live while the weak and the
-foolish die soon.</p>
-
-<p>But the little horse’s fright passed quickly. He was a
-true child of the wilderness and fear was a passing
-shadow. With the circling killers gone from the sky he
-forgot them and sought dinner. He was much stronger
-now, his legs had stiffened and he was able to bounce up
-and down. The blood of his father gave him something
-Lady Ebony did not have, a vitality and a savageness all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-babies of the wild must have to survive. Had he been
-born with the band he would have been able to follow
-them. He made a short circle among the rocks, then came
-back to his mother’s side where he thrust his head under
-her flank and began drinking lustily. Lady Ebony was
-proud of him, but she was worried too, because there
-were so many enemies in this wild country. She was a
-horse trained to depend upon man, his fences and his
-protecting rifle. Vaguely she knew she should be in a shed
-during this important time. Midnight shared none of her
-worries; he was typically a wild horse.</p>
-
-<p>That evening the big bobcat serenaded them from the
-blue-black depths of the cottonwood grove. No man or
-beast who has ever heard the terrifying yowling of the
-cat-of-the-mountain when he is struck by a lonely mood
-has remained calm and unfrightened. Even the cougar
-and the wolf move off when he starts serenading. The big
-cat began his plaint with long “me-ows” till after a few
-minutes his cry was a series of “row-row-rows,” ending in
-terrific screeches. The weird screaming echoed along the
-rock walls of the gorge. It finally tapered off into long-drawn
-wails filled with hopeless despair as though the big
-fellow was condemned to a terrible fate and knew his
-time was near.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony rushed to the side of Midnight and began
-frantically herding him up the canyon. She did not
-have to urge the little horse. He struck out wildly, running
-as fast as he could, looking back in terror, expecting
-to see a monster leap on him from the woods.</p>
-
-<p>A pair of coyotes trotting up the canyon halted and
-stood for a moment staring through the moonlight. They
-whirled and raced back, casting glances over their shoulders
-as they ran.</p>
-
-<p>After a time the big pussy with the bobtail walked
-out of the grove and seated himself on a rock. Whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-had been troubling him seemed to have been
-chased away by his vocal efforts. He yawned and
-stretched his lithe body leisurely, then looked around
-with a satisfied smirk. He had the canyon to himself and
-seemed highly pleased.</p>
-
-<p>He was a male weighing perhaps twenty-five pounds.
-His ears had black tufts at the ends, his lips were white
-with whiskers springing from black spots. In this he favored
-the lynx cat. But his eye rings were white and his
-reddish-brown body was marked with cloudings suggesting
-spots while his feet were small like those of a house
-cat. His tail was not more than seven inches long, a
-stubby bobbed-off tail, but it jerked nervously as he
-sat smiling over his kingdom of rock piles and tall grass.
-He was not hungry and the hunting mood did not fill
-him. He had feasted well on wood rat and rabbit earlier
-that evening. He had simply wished to clear all neighbors
-from his presence. Now that he had done it he sat
-and smirked on the top of his big rock.</p>
-
-<p>But the big cat did not reckon with one hunter who
-was not impressed by his terrible song. A big, snowy
-owl came beating along the canyon wall. His dim shadow
-floated across the grass toward the rock where the cat
-was sitting. The owl had not feasted that evening. Fate
-had been unkind. Every rabbit pasture he had swept
-over had already been raided by coyotes or cats. The
-old owl was never choice about his prey. His way was
-to strike at any living thing that came under his powerful
-beak and talons. He saw the shadow on the rock
-move. The animal sitting there was not bigger than many
-he had killed before. With a scream he dived.</p>
-
-<p>His smashing body struck the surprised cat on the
-neck and back. Long talons sank deep into the stringy
-muscles while powerful wings battered the sleek sides,
-knocking him off his perch and rolling him over. Instantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-the sleepy fellow was changed to a hissing, spitting
-demon. He twisted his body and with claws and
-teeth lashed back at the ripping beak and beating wings
-of the owl. The owl drove his fangs deeper and tore at
-his snarling victim with his hooked beak.</p>
-
-<p>The bobcat’s fangs found the neck of the owl and
-sank into it with crunching swiftness. Blood spattered
-and fur and feathers filled the air. The battlers clung to
-their death holds and exerted all their strength. The bobcat’s
-raking hind feet ripped feathers out of his assailant
-and found the stringy flesh beneath them; his fangs
-sank deeper. Over and over they rolled, the owl flapping
-and clicking his beak savagely, the cat hissing and snarling
-and yowling.</p>
-
-<p>Both fighters weakened quickly because their wounds
-were deep and driven into vital parts. They tumbled into
-a hollow between two big rocks. There they struggled
-feebly for a time. Finally they lay still, the crumpled
-and tangled body of the owl under that of the cat, his
-big, round eyes staring savagely up at the stars. The bobcat
-lay with fangs driven into the neck of his antagonist,
-his yellow eyes closed to slits, his sleek coat marred by
-tufts of torn hair.</p>
-
-<p>A little wind stirred down the canyon. It passed over
-the hollow where the dead animals lay, it seemed to
-spread the news that two deadly hunters had passed out
-of the red rock garden. The bunnies crept out to the edge
-of their thicket homes and the wood mice and rats ventured
-into the tall grass. After the way of the wild they
-started feeding peacefully.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony and Midnight halted in the middle of a
-meadow a mile above the spot where the battle had
-taken place. Midnight, true to his wild instinct, had already
-forgotten the fear that had sent him charging out
-of the garden below. He saw a doe and a fawn feeding at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-the edge of the meadow and started over to make friends
-with them. Lady Ebony did not forget so quickly. She
-was nervous and excited all that night and tried to keep
-her son from walking up to the doe.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight approached the mule deer and her fawn. He
-nickered softly and humped his back, doing a little dance
-to show off before them. The doe snorted and shook her
-head. She was not afraid of a colt but she would take no
-chances with her baby. She turned about and led the
-little one back into the brush.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony stayed in the upper meadow. She wanted
-to give her son time to get his legs under him before
-moving on. By the third day the colt was able to race
-around the meadow. He noticed the brightly colored
-flowers, and made a great show of fear when a rabbit
-hopped away before one of his charges. He was inquisitive
-and shoved his pink muzzle close to everything that
-interested him. That day he met one of the wilderness
-dwellers who lived in a burrow under a dead stump.
-Midnight was dancing about pretending to be frightened
-by a pair of rockchips who sat on a stone scolding
-and chattering because he had disturbed them. The
-stranger walked out of a brier thicket and marched down
-a deer trail.</p>
-
-<p>He was sleek and black except for broad stripes of
-white running down his back. His tail was a handsome
-plume of drooping hair, his snout was pointed, and his
-little eyes stared out on the world like black buttons
-sewed on his face. This stranger showed little interest in
-his surroundings. His dull mind held but one thought.
-Hunting for mice and bugs had been poor in the thicket
-near his burrow; he was crossing the meadow to another
-thicket. He had no fear of other animals. He claimed
-the right of way on every trail and not even a grizzly
-bear would have contested that right.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Midnight stared at the striped brother, then shook his
-head and stamped his feet. He expected the big skunk
-to scamper for cover, then he would chase him. When
-the striped one paid no attention to him Midnight advanced
-a little closer. Perhaps this dull-sighted fellow
-was a little deaf. He danced and stamped his feet some
-more as he extended his nose toward the skunk. The
-skunk marched on, ignoring the little horse. Midnight
-stamped close to the striped fellow; the skunk’s plume
-lifted with a jerk as dirt and rocks showered over him
-from the colt’s hoofs. Any other wild creature would have
-fled from that danger signal. To Midnight this seemed a
-friendly gesture. He whinnied eagerly and thrust his nose
-closer to the striped one. The plume jerked twice as the
-skunk halted in the trail.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony saw the skunk. She whinnied a loud
-warning. Midnight jerked up his head and looked
-around. He expected to see an enemy descending from
-the air or rushing out of the woods. His action saved him
-considerable pain and surprise. A greenish flare of musk
-shot by, close under his nose. Reeking fumes rolled
-around him. Midnight whirled and galloped hastily toward
-his mother. He dashed past her and thrust his
-muzzle into the cool water of the stream. Then he ran
-back to her side and stood staring at the striped brother,
-who was marching at an unhurried pace down the deer
-trail. The skunk’s aim had been low but he had taught
-Midnight another lesson. The striped one was master of
-all trails and not to be annoyed or disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>The musky smell hung so rank and strong over the
-meadow that Lady Ebony led her son to the lower end
-of the field where the breeze carried the smell away
-from them.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony did not move on up the canyon to the
-long slopes dropping away from the higher benches of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-the Crazy Kill Range. There would still be chill nights
-and deep snowdrifts in the spruce near the peaks. She
-wandered slowly up the little stream, halting for days
-at a time in lush meadows where the grass was green and
-tender. Midnight grew rapidly; his legs became strong
-and steady. Lady Ebony watched over him constantly,
-never letting him stray far from her side. When he raced
-around a meadow she followed him, running at his side,
-urging him to greater speed.</p>
-
-<p>She remembered the things she had learned on the
-high mesa. When she made long stops she chose rock-bordered
-meadows where the yellowbelly whistlers lived.
-The yellowbellies always had sentries posted in the daytime.
-At night when the whistlers were deep in their burrows
-she lay down close beside her son.</p>
-
-<p>An afternoon came when she had need for her vigilance.
-From a high perch on a red rim a lank cougar
-sighted the mare and her colt. He was lying on a narrow
-shelf where the warm sun beat down on his sleek
-hide as he drowsed. Through slitted eyes he watched
-Lady Ebony and Midnight feeding below his lofty
-perch. There was no flesh he prized more highly than
-young colt. He twitched the black tip of his tail and unsheathed
-his sharp claws, but he did not move. Slow,
-sure, and patient methods were those of the yellow killer.
-Once he had waited on a ledge for four days in order to
-make a kill, a scrawny colt from a wild band. The colt
-in the meadow below would be easier prey because
-there was cover close to the tall grass.</p>
-
-<p>The king cat lay watching until late afternoon. He
-yawned many times and his red tongue arched between
-his long fangs as he opened his mouth. As long shadows
-began to creep out from the canyon walls he yawned
-again, a stretching yawn, then got slowly to his feet. He
-tested the wind and looked up and down the wall. Lank,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-sag-backed, with high shoulders and high, projecting
-hipbones, he was a killer to be feared even by a grown
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>The cougar slid down among the big rocks piled at the
-base of the walls. He moved on great padded feet without
-sound. Halting beside a rock almost the same color
-as his tawny robe he stood for a long time staring
-through the evening light on the pair below. Midnight
-was having his supper. He was feeding hungrily, butting
-his mother’s side, twitching his tail. The cougar
-stood, silent and unmoving, except for the tip of his
-tail which snapped back and forth nervously. His nine
-feet of stringy muscle and furry tail blended with the
-great rock beside him.</p>
-
-<p>He appeared not to be giving much attention to the
-scene below him. Really he was surveying the ground
-he had selected as a hunting spot and was missing no
-detail. He could creep out on the windward side of the
-mare where a clump of buckbrush grew. From there he
-would have two mighty leaps to make. He would wait
-until the colt had moved away from his mother’s side.
-Perhaps the youngster would wander close to the buckbrush.
-His black whiskers jerked and his yellow eyes
-flamed through slitted lids. Softly, silently he skirted the
-piled-up rocks and slid into the timber to windward of
-the feeding horses. Like a tawny shadow he passed from
-one bit of cover to the next, his lank belly close to the
-ground. He often halted his unhurried descent to stand
-staring down on his victim.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the last of the cover he flattened his belly
-to the ground and crept forward through the tall grass.
-He kept moving, slowly, noiselessly, until he lay behind
-the clump of buckbrush. There he lifted his head and
-stared out through the green leaves.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had finished his supper and was nosing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-about a few yards from his mother. Lady Ebony had
-dropped her head and was pulling grass. She turned
-slowly toward the open meadow, her back toward the
-killer. She had no thought of danger at the moment. The
-big cat listened intently. He wanted to be sure the yellowbelly
-whistlers had all gone in for the night. His head
-rested on his forepaws. There was no sound except that
-made by the horses, but he waited, rigid.</p>
-
-<p>The dusk deepened and the big cat stirred. He raised
-his head and peered out across the grass. And now his
-eyes were wide open, yellow pools of savage eagerness
-contrasting with his relaxed body. Midnight was strutting
-about, sniffing and snorting, humping his back and shaking
-his head. Lady Ebony was moving steadily away
-from the clump of buckbrush. The cat’s belly dropped
-to the grass, his hind legs drew up under him, his head
-flattened between his massive forepaws. His yellow eyes
-had located the exact spot where his first leap would
-land him, a bare spot where the grass was dead. From
-there he would hurtle upon the unwary colt. He meant
-to strike the little horse down with a broken neck so
-that no matter how well the mare might give battle the
-colt would lie waiting for him when she moved away.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the great body of the king killer was
-tense and still, then he leaped, his body arching upward,
-his great claws reaching out before him. He landed
-noiselessly on the patch of dead grass and poised there
-a split second while he drew his legs under him; then
-he leaped again, rising high, hurling his body toward
-the colt.</p>
-
-<p>An odd quirk of energy made Midnight jerk up his
-head. He began bucking and bouncing. That sudden
-impulse saved him from the smashing blow the cougar
-intended to land. The yellow killer landed where Midnight
-had been standing. His scream of blood lust rang<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
-out, but his long fangs and ripping claws missed their
-target. Midnight squealed in terror as he saw the yellow
-killer clawing and lashing beside him. He plunged toward
-his mother, and Lady Ebony leaped to his rescue.</p>
-
-<p>She sprang at the enraged lion with uplifted hoofs
-lashing and flailing. Mother instinct had completely banished
-her fear of the yellow killer. The cougar reared
-back and lashed at her but he did not stand his ground.
-Before her hoofs could smash down on him he leaped
-back, spitting and snarling. Lady Ebony did not stop her
-charge. Her slender legs pumped madly. The cougar
-was knocked off his feet and sent sprawling in the grass.
-He rolled over, righted himself, then fled before the
-pounding hoofs of the infuriated mare. Reaching the
-cottonwood timber he bounded up a tree and lay licking
-his bruises and spitting angrily.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony charged back to Midnight and shoved
-him up across the meadow. The cougar leaped down
-from the tree. Circling, he followed the pair, limping.
-Blood stained the weeds and tall grass along his trail.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony headed out of the meadow and up a
-deer trail. She kept moving, forcing Midnight to stay
-close to her side. The white starlight dimly outlined rocks
-and trees. They came to an open meadow but she did
-not halt. Midnight forgot the fear that had very nearly
-paralyzed him. He wanted to stop and rest. In the center
-of the meadow his mother halted and let him drink. As
-he eagerly fed she kept testing the night air, stamping
-her feet nervously and looking back down the trail.
-When Midnight had finished his lunch she moved on
-toward the high, dim hills looming above the canyon.</p>
-
-<p>The cougar followed the trail of the horses for a while,
-but his smashed shoulder was giving him much pain,
-and he finally climbed on a ledge where he stretched
-his tawny length on a rocky bed and fell to licking the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-gash. Had he escaped unhurt he would have circled
-above the mare and her colt until he found a ledge from
-which he could attack again.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony kept moving throughout the night. The
-gray dawn found her going steadily upward. Just before
-noon they entered the oak belt at the base of the Crazy
-Kill Range. There she found a stream and an open
-meadow. Midnight insisted upon lying down to rest. No
-amount of coaxing would rouse him. He lay stretched
-out in the sun and closed his eyes. Lady Ebony was hungry.
-She began feeding close to where he slept. By the
-time he had finished his sleep she was grazing peacefully.</p>
-
-<p>Mother and son spent long, sunny days in the meadow
-surrounded by oak brush. Lady Ebony seldom thought
-of the high mountain meadows. She had no desire to go
-anywhere at all. Midnight was beginning to feel that he
-was a grown horse. He danced and kicked and raced
-around. He even tried to make his mother do what he
-thought she should do. When she calmly ignored him
-and went on feeding he would lay back his ears and
-bare his teeth, nipping at her until she humped her back
-and threatened to lash out at him.</p>
-
-<p>Many enemies passed the meadow and several paused
-to look at the fat colt and his mother. Two old lobos
-halted and calmly watched the colt at play. Coyotes
-trotted through the meadow in pairs or singly. An old
-bear shambled out of the oak brush and charged after a
-ground squirrel. He passed close to the frightened mother
-and her son but paid no attention to them. The killers
-were finding life easy. The hills abounded with grouse
-and rabbits as well as every species of squirrel. There
-were many mule deer, too. Old does watched over playful
-fawns growing strong and independent. The killers
-need not face the lashing feet of an infuriated mother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-horse to kill all they could eat. So they looked and went
-their way.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight tried to make friends with the does. They
-were not afraid of him but they were not friendly. They
-stared at him out of calm eyes when he came near them,
-and they snorted and trotted at him when he tried to run
-with their fawns.</p>
-
-<p>One evening Midnight saw a deer feeding at the edge
-of a clearing. He trotted over to the big-eared one in a
-friendly manner. But this one was different from the
-does. He had long, branching antlers and snorted aggressively
-when he halted and whinnied eagerly. Midnight
-stood staring at the strange deer with branches
-on his head. The buck snorted again. His horns were beginning
-to harden and the velvet was dropping away
-from their sharp spikes. With the hardening process his
-shoulders had begun to swell and his temper was becoming
-uncertain.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight moved a little closer. He humped his back
-and kicked up his heels. The buck grunted angrily, then
-snorted. With a shake of his head he lowered his sweeping
-antlers and trotted toward the colt. Midnight circled
-and the buck circled. Midnight whirled and raced away.
-This fellow wanted to play. He’d give him a run around
-the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>The buck jerked up his head and shook it. He had
-routed the enemy and was satisfied. He began feeding
-again, cropping the weeds and shoots, champing steadily.
-Midnight circled and galloped back to the old buck.
-This time the big fellow charged. The colt realized that
-the antlered deer wanted to fight and not play. Kicking
-his heels high he fled to his mother’s side.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony ran toward the buck and the big fellow
-bounded into the timber. Midnight felt he had won a
-great victory. He celebrated by charging around the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-meadow at a terrific pace. Lady Ebony watched him as
-he ran.</p>
-
-<p>But a day came when the mare felt an urge to move
-on. Summer had slipped away and fall had brought frost
-and sharp winds from the peaks above. The high, barren
-reaches above timber line were white with new snow.
-Lady Ebony remembered the roundup when riders came
-to the high mesa and drove the horses down to the feed
-grounds in the valley. She moved about restlessly and
-finally struck off up the slope. Winter was coming and
-she was ready to go down the long trail to the home
-ranch. Her brief training with the wild band was forgotten,
-she was again a willing captive of man’s way.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>With the passing of summer Sam grew more listless
-and weary. He hated to take his daily walk in the padded
-yard behind the high walls which shut out the sight of
-his mountains. He preferred to sit in his cell and stare
-at the changing cottonwood branch. He had chalked
-another fall on his cell wall, but he thought about it for
-a week before he put the mark down. He was tired but
-he’d get over that once he was back on his mountain
-mesa where he could sit in the sun and watch his
-neighbors.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="vii" id="vii"></a>7. The Way of the High Country</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">There</span> were many inviting meadows along the trail
-which led up to the high mesa. The aspen groves were
-inviting in the daytime, the rugged hillsides were rich
-with herbs and frost-ripened grass. Lady Ebony and
-Midnight did not hurry. Indian summer filled the valleys
-below with purple haze and the air was warm and
-smoky. They passed through a wild, rough country,
-across a high ridge by way of a deep saddle, then they
-dropped down to the mesa where Lady Ebony was born
-and where she had spent all her summers except one.</p>
-
-<p>Below the mesa the aspen belt flamed in garments of
-brilliant yellow. The rustling leaves would cling to the
-branches for a few more days. The first gale sweeping
-down from the snow peaks would loosen them and send
-them sailing to their beds along the slope. The oak belt,
-below the aspens, was red and purple like the upholstery
-of a piece of expensive furniture in its design and blending
-of color. Fall was flaunting its brightest colors for a
-few short days. Lady Ebony stood on the edge of the
-meadow and looked across the brown grass to Sam’s
-cabin, silent and deserted. She nickered softly and
-trotted toward the weathered cabin. Halting before the
-closed door, she pawed the ground and whinnied louder.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-There was no answer. Old Sam did not come shuffling
-out to give her lump sugar.</p>
-
-<p>The old yellowbelly sentinel chuckled from his perch
-on the high rock. He did not seem to understand that
-the black mare had been away. He did not shrill his
-warning whistle or jump down from his high perch. The
-calico chips dashed about in frantic haste, their cheeks
-pouched out with seeds and dry bits of roots. They
-realized that there was but a short time in which to
-complete their work of filling caches of food. The fat-bellied
-rockchips sat and stared into the blue-and-purple
-haze. They intended to do a little more work but the
-sun was warm and they were fat and lazy.</p>
-
-<p>A saucy chipmunk jumped to the top of a weed and
-sat there, swaying back and forth. His high-pitched
-“chock, chock, chock” rang across the meadow. Instantly
-every member of his tribe mounted a sing perch and
-their chorus rang out. The song pitched higher and
-shifted to “check, check, check, chir-r-r-up.”</p>
-
-<p>At the far end of the meadow the dog town burst into
-excited barking and saucy “squit-tuck’s.” Lady Ebony
-tossed her head. This was home and her welcome back
-was what it should be except for the closed door of the
-old cabin. Midnight bounded around, kicking his heels
-high and bucking. Lady Ebony walked around the cabin
-and sniffed eagerly. Her nose told her something was
-wrong. The familiar smells were dim and cold, the taint
-of Sam’s rank pipe, the pungent smell of the man himself,
-a smell so definite and different from that of the
-dwellers of the wild. Midnight raced about. He was
-not greatly interested in the cabin, though he had never
-seen or smelled anything like it before. He wanted to
-play, so he galloped away across the meadow, dry clods
-flying from his pounding hoofs.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony settled down to wait. She expected Sam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-with his lumps of sugar and she expected Tex and the
-boys from the ranch. These thoughts were rather vague,
-but they were strong enough to keep her in the meadow
-and to overcome her uneasiness as her nose warned her
-of coming storms. A week of Indian summer passed with
-warm hazy days and snapping cold nights. Both Lady
-Ebony and Midnight had grown thick, warm coats and
-the nights did not bother them. Frost carpeted the
-meadow with white jewels every night, and every day
-the sun melted the frost. Sam did not come and Tex did
-not come galloping out of the timber at the head of his
-roundup crew. The crew had finished its work in the
-high country the week before Lady Ebony’s arrival, and
-had left the brown grass and the everlasting green spruce
-to the blizzards and the deep snows. The horses and
-the white-faced cattle were all accounted for.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon a change came in the weather. The
-air had been snapping cold for days with the sun’s rays
-softening it but little. It became softer and warmer.
-Gray clouds raced over the timbered slopes, rolling low,
-touching the tops of the highest spruce. The gray wall
-swept down over the spruce and over the meadow. Snow
-began falling, big, soft flakes that sailed down like
-loosened leaves. The snow settled through a deep silence
-which filled the woods and lay heavy on the meadow.
-The chickaree squirrels in the tall spruce worked frantically,
-cutting cones from the branches, dropping them
-to the ground with steady, thumping sounds. They chattered
-and scolded as they worked. The old yellowbelly
-left his perch and romped to his den under the castle
-rock. The calico chips and the chipmunks and the fat-bellied
-brownies retired for the long night which was
-to last until spring came. The mesa was deserted, leaving
-only Lady Ebony, Midnight, and the big flakes of snow.</p>
-
-<p>The wind rose and came roaring down. The great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-spruces swayed and moaned as the wind rushed through
-their branches and tore at their needles. The big flakes
-were powdered to fine dust and eddied in and out among
-the brown grass stems. The aspen leaves danced and
-swirled as they floated from the white branches. In less
-than an hour the uplifted arms of the silver trees were
-naked. But where each leaf had loosened its hold a
-brown bud peeped down, wrapped up in a warm little
-muffler and hood. The round leaves whirled along the
-ground and piled deep on the lee side of big trunks and
-in deep hollows on the slope. Under the bed of leaves the
-columbine and the paint weed and the lupine felt safer
-and warmer.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony led Midnight to the lee of the cabin
-where they stood with heads down, backs to the sifting
-snow. All afternoon the white wall pressed close around
-them. Darkness came early, a black, solid darkness
-which blotted out every object, even the cabin wall
-close to their noses. In the morning the blizzard was still
-raging furiously. The snow was deep on the meadow,
-as deep as the knees of the black colt.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony fought her way out to the edge of the
-mesa and began pawing for grass. Midnight went with
-her and helped. They dug down and found a mat of
-rich, cured grass. With their tails to the lashing wind
-they fed. When they had eaten their fill they returned
-to the lee side of the cabin and Midnight had a scant
-but warm meal. Then he lay down. The snow melted
-around his body and froze into ice at the edges of the
-curves.</p>
-
-<p>For three days the storm raged. When it cleared and
-the last of the gray clouds scurried away over the tops
-of the green spruce on the wings of the dying wind
-three feet of snow lay on the level mesa and four or five
-feet in the hollows and drifts. In places the wind had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-swept the dry snow away from the grass and feeding was
-easy for the horses. But snapping, biting cold followed
-the storm, making their breath plume out in wreaths
-of white fog and causing icicles to form on their nose
-hair and chins. Their faces were covered with white frost
-from their breathing.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight showed keen interest in this new world. It
-was a white world, a silent world of snow and green
-spruce. The biting cold made him plunge through the
-deep drifts and snort eagerly. One other dweller of the
-high country, who could not sleep through the cold
-months, came to the meadow. An old timber-line buck
-had chosen to stay in the high mesa country defying the
-cold and the snow. The does and the fawns and the spike
-bucks had drifted downcountry before the storm. The
-two-points had gone with them and most of the four-points.
-The timber-line monarch stayed because he was
-wary and shunned the ranch-dotted valleys below the
-storm belt. He preferred the savage cold and the stalking
-killers to the rifles and dogs of the men who lived
-in the low country.</p>
-
-<p>He dug down into the snow seeking herbs and twigs.
-He did not care for the dry, rich grass, and he watched
-the mare and her colt without interest, staring at them,
-then shaking his heavy antlers and returning to his feeding.
-The old fellow knew the dangers he faced, he had
-met them before and expected to meet them again.</p>
-
-<p>The clear, cold weather held for a week. The days
-were sparkling and crisp, the nights blue and bitterly
-cold, with white stars reflecting their countless points of
-light upon the gleaming snow fields. In the aspen groves
-trees snapped and popped as the frost sought their
-hearts. Lady Ebony left the lee of the cabin and found a
-sheltered spot beside one of the big castle rocks at a
-point near the edge of the deep canyon. A narrow ledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
-trail led up to the shelter and an outthrust layer of rock
-furnished a roof so that the earth under the shelter was
-free from snow. A shoulder of the wall shut off the
-wind, making the retreat really a barn.</p>
-
-<p>A crevice in the roof of the shelter harbored a nest of
-pack rats. Sticks, pine cones, bright rocks, and other
-things dear to the heart of a trade rat had been crammed
-into the crevice until they spilled out on the floor. The
-whole cave was tainted with rat smell, pungent and
-musty.</p>
-
-<p>The black robes of the mare and her colt grew shaggy
-and thick, as the bitter cold deepened. Lady Ebony and
-Midnight were forced to seek grass at the upper end of
-the meadow below the cabin because the wind struck
-that part of the mesa, clearing the snow away. Every
-morning they plunged through deep drifts to reach the
-wind-swept portion of the meadow, returning again at
-night to their shelter.</p>
-
-<p>The week of clear weather was broken late one afternoon.
-Clouds began to cluster around the high spires
-of the Crazy Kills. They crept into high craters and
-wound around the tall, granite cathedrals on top of the
-world like great cats stalking their prey. Above they
-were silvery white and gleamed like jeweled blankets,
-below they were dark gray and, in spots, black.</p>
-
-<p>A feeble sun shone on the mesa, and two yellow sun-dogs
-blazoned forth on either side of it like sentinels.
-The air was still and the silence deep. Slowly the temperature
-rose and Midnight sniffed eagerly and plunged
-about in the snow. He was disturbed but did not know
-why. Lady Ebony jerked up her head and tested the air.
-She knew another storm was coming. Then the clouds
-rolled down over the spruce, blotting out the shining
-mountain peaks, the big soft flakes came and later the
-lashing wind. Another blizzard gripped the high mesa.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
-With the wind came cutting cold that stabbed through
-even the thick coats of the horses. Lady Ebony headed
-across the meadow toward their shelter.</p>
-
-<p>For many days the blizzard raged and roared and the
-snow fell. When the storm cleared, the snow was deeper
-than it had been in many winters. It piled in great, hundred-foot
-drifts along the comb ridges, in lips which
-thrust themselves out over the spruce below. Slides
-roared into the canyons as those lips broke and shot
-down the steep slopes. The white terrors mowed swaths
-through the spruce and tore great boulders from their
-beds, grinding them to dingy gray rivers of twisting,
-roaring debris which cascaded into the creek bottoms
-and slid up the far slopes. The thunder of the slides
-shook the mesa and the ridges, starting new rivers of
-snow.</p>
-
-<p>When the white death roared, Midnight always
-crowded close to his mother’s side and stared up at the
-ridges trying to see the monster that could roar louder
-than any animal he had ever heard. Lady Ebony was
-disturbed but she nickered reassuringly to her son and
-did not lead a charge through the deep snow.</p>
-
-<p>Digging for food was a job which required all the short
-day. The upper end of the meadow still offered the best
-feed ground, though the snow lay three feet deep on
-that part of it. The timber-line buck came down from
-a bed in the rocks and fed close to the horses. He ate
-much grass now because he could not scoop the snow
-away so easily as the horses did. And he browsed on
-willow growing along the stream, but such feeding meant
-fighting snow six feet deep. Sometimes he followed the
-horses and ate the weeds they uncovered and left untouched.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony and Midnight came to expect the timber-line
-buck to join them in their battle for food. The three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-fed close together in comradeship. Theirs was a common
-fight against a common enemy. The buck no longer
-charged at Midnight when the little horse walked up to
-him. And Lady Ebony no longer whinnied warningly
-when her son approached the antlered monarch.</p>
-
-<p>Life was hard for the three on the mesa, but not as
-hard as it was for the killers who roamed the silent
-forests. The gray wolves and the cougars hunted daily,
-their sides gaunt. The snowy owls beat along the edges
-of the timber, their glassy eyes staring down savagely.
-But there was little food. The snow had not crusted and
-the gray wolves and the cougars could not overtake the
-hardy mule deer remaining in the mountains. They
-wallowed and floundered while the deer and the elk
-bounded up and clear of the clinging drifts. Night and
-day the killers hunted with savage intensity, their yellow
-eyes flaming with savage hunger. When one of a wolf
-pack was wounded or crippled, the pack turned on him
-and devoured him as they would any lesser prey.</p>
-
-<p>A day came when the weather moderated, the sun
-shone, and the snow softened and settled. A warm wind
-blew from the valleys below. The wind melted the top
-snow to a depth of several inches. That night the cold
-returned, the trees popped, and the air was still and
-brittle. Frost crystals coated the willows along the
-stream and made brilliant jewelry of every branch and
-twig rising above the snow. The trees looked like rock
-candy. The slushy snow froze into ice and the world was
-coated with a hard armor. And now the gaunt killers
-could race swiftly over the surface while deer and elk
-broke through. The killers slaughtered savagely, gorging
-themselves on fresh meat until they could not run. The
-coyotes and the owls fed at the tables of the great ones
-after the hunters had passed on to fresh kills.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony and Midnight found the battle to reach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-the cured grass under the snow much more difficult,
-now that the ice had come. They were forced to feed
-later into the night in order to fill their bellies. They
-pawed and smashed at the thick armor covering the
-drifts. A full moon shone down, its white light flashing
-back from the glistening ice. The air was snapping
-cold as night settled, but Lady Ebony delayed returning
-to their shelter. They had not fed well that day. She was
-pawing down the crust, then scooping away the loose
-snow. The old timber-line buck followed close behind
-the two horses. He was gaunt and lank. His slender hoofs
-made poor weapons against the ice.</p>
-
-<p>The air was still with the stillness of a dead world.
-Suddenly Lady Ebony jerked up her head. From the
-ridge above the mesa came the cry of an old lobo wolf
-and his bachelor pack. They were racing down from
-the high barrens seeking prey. The old lobo had not led
-his sons into the lower country. He was wise and cunning
-and had kept his pack high above the ranches with
-their poison sets, their traps, and their guns. He preferred
-the savage struggle of the snow-locked high country
-to the sure death lurking in the open valleys. He
-had ranged above the belt where the deer and the elk
-wintered and had not led his sons to a kill in more than
-a week. The slaughter going on lower down the slope had
-not been shared by these gaunt killers.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony listened intently. The pack was running
-down the ridge above the mesa. She shook her head
-restlessly and looked across the meadow toward the
-castle rocks. Turning she took a few steps toward the
-lower end of the meadow. The timber-line buck grunted
-protestingly as he floundered out of her way. Midnight
-kept on digging in the snow. He was still hungry. The
-snarling of the pack sounded farther down the ridge
-and Lady Ebony turned back to where Midnight was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-pawing. The howling rose in savage crescendo. The pack
-had swerved and was heading toward the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>The timber-line buck did not wait to listen. He began
-floundering and plunging across the open toward the
-woods where he knew the warm sun had not softened
-the snow so that it crusted. Here he could double and
-bound; his speed would save him from the gray ones.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony snorted and whirled. She took one long
-leap, then halted and looked back, nickering loudly,
-warningly. Midnight stood looking at her. He was chewing
-a mouthful of grass he had pulled from under the
-snow. He swallowed the grass and thrust his head back
-into the hole. He had found a good mat of grass and
-meant to finish it. The howling pack did not disturb him
-greatly. He had never been attacked by wolves. All the
-wolves he had met had loped away when he ran toward
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony leaped back to his side and crowded
-against him. She whinnied excitedly and pawed the
-snow, then whirled and leaped a few yards toward the
-rocky point. Midnight pulled up a tasty mouthful of
-grass and munched at it, then dived down for more.
-Lady Ebony was frantic. She plunged at him and nipped
-his rump sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight’s hips jerked and he lashed out with his
-hoofs, striking his mother a smashing blow. She had
-never bitten him so severely before and his temper
-flared. Lady Ebony charged at him again. She had to
-make him follow her.</p>
-
-<p>Up in the spruce the old lobo heard her whinny and
-the tone of his howls changed from hungry yelping to
-savage eagerness. Instantly his sons, leaping at his side,
-took up the cry. After many days of stark hunger the
-old one had led them to a kill.</p>
-
-<p>The gray killers burst out of the darkness under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-spruce, running madly, their fangs gleaming, their red
-tongues lolling. They flashed into the gleaming moonlight
-like shadows. Midnight jerked up his head. He
-saw the glowing, yellow eyes of the killers, the white
-fangs, and the red tongues as the wolves leaped across
-the crusted snow. Fear gripped him, and with a wild
-squeal of fright he plunged away, breaking through the
-crust, floundering, stumbling.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony did not rush after him. She knew they
-could not both escape the swift shadows so close upon
-them. With a toss of her flowing mane she plunged toward
-the pack. After charging a few yards she halted
-and her front hoofs rose. A defiant, screaming cry came
-from her chest. The wolves leaped in on her, dodging
-her flailing hoofs, their fangs reaching from every side.
-The old lobo leaped straight at her throat while his
-sons swarmed around her. One smashing hoof struck
-the lobo and sent him spinning across the glare of ice.
-But as she hurled the old one from her, two young
-wolves ripped her flanks while another tore a gash in
-her shoulder. They leaped and lashed and ripped, springing
-in, darting away.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Ebony could not run and the deep snow kept
-her from pivoting to meet the rear attack. She was
-doomed and she knew it, but she did not try to plunge
-away. Her son was floundering to the safety of the ledge
-and she had to hold the pack where they were until he
-reached the castle rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The old lobo scrambled to his feet. Lady Ebony’s flank
-was turned to him. He leaped and his fangs sank deep,
-driving toward the tendons of her leg. He did not waver
-and spring away. He struck with savage recklessness.
-His sharp fangs severed the tendons and Lady Ebony
-went down. Instantly the whole pack swarmed over her,
-tearing at her sleek coat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Midnight plunged on across the meadow. The pack
-was so busy tearing at the black mare that they did not
-follow him. He reached the ledge trail and plunged up
-to a shelf where there was room for him to whirl about.
-He stood staring out across the meadow, listening to the
-snarling of the pack as they fed on the carcass lying in
-the snow. He was still standing there when the pack
-turned away from the bloody bones of his mother and
-began looking for him.</p>
-
-<p>They picked up his trail and raced across the gleaming
-snow. He watched them come, and courage, the
-courage of a cornered animal, plus the wild and savage
-fighting heart given him by the chestnut stallion came
-to him. He shrilled a challenge and reared up on his
-hind feet, his little ears laid back, his teeth bared.</p>
-
-<p>The old lobo was the first to leap up the ledge trail.
-He lunged at the black colt. Midnight’s lashing hoofs
-met him and sent him tumbling back upon his leaping
-sons. The bachelors swept past their father and closed
-in. They were not so hungry but the blood lust ran hot
-within them. They wanted to kill again and their easy
-victory over the mare made them feel certain of their
-victim.</p>
-
-<p>One of the youngsters leaped at Midnight’s throat.
-Two lashing hoofs met the gray body in mid-air. The
-killer screamed with rage and pain as his body writhed
-on the snow. He slid down toward the canyon rim and
-over the edge, hurtling into the shadowy depths below.
-Another youngster leaped and was smashed back.</p>
-
-<p>The pack backed away from the flailing hoofs. Their
-bellies were gorged with meat and much of their savageness
-had left them. There was no way to surround the
-colt or to leap at his flanks. They sat down on the snow
-and glared at him, their yellow eyes flaming eagerly,
-their red tongues dripping as they extended above white<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-fangs. The old lobo licked his wounds and growled deep
-in his chest.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight waited, poised. But they did not attack
-again. One killer lay dead at the base of the canyon wall,
-while another crawled around on the snow, snarling
-and whimpering, his ribs caved in by the hoofs of the
-little stallion. Presently the old lobo got to his feet. He
-made a feint toward Midnight, but when the pounding
-hoofs lifted menacingly he turned and trotted away
-with his pack close behind him. They paid no attention
-to the wounded wolf.</p>
-
-<p>Out on the meadow Midnight heard them pause at
-the carcass of his mother and begin feeding again. He
-stood for a long time listening, nickering softly, calling
-to his mother, trying to tell her that he had beaten the
-pack. There was no answer except the pack’s snarling
-and the yelp of a coyote that had smelled the fresh
-blood and come to the edge of the woods to wait until
-the gray ones were done with their banquet.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight stood guard until the pack finished worrying
-the bones in the meadow. After they had loped away
-into the timber he turned back to the shelter and stood
-waiting for his mother.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="viii" id="viii"></a>8. The Strong Survive</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">When</span> the little black stallion came out of his shelter
-the morning after the wolf raid the sun was shining on
-the glare of ice which covered the meadow. The old
-timber-line buck was plunging toward the feed ground.
-Midnight whinnied eagerly for his mother and shook
-his head impatiently. He was hungry and wanted her
-badly. When he got no answer he moved down the
-ledge trail. At the spot where the wolves had attacked
-him he halted and sniffed the snow, blowing loudly,
-pawing the ground angrily.</p>
-
-<p>He moved out across the meadow. The old buck lifted
-his head from a hole in the snow and stared at him. Midnight
-whinnied again. He was glad to see the buck
-calmly feeding. It drove away some of the fear that he
-felt because he could not see his mother. The buck
-dropped his head to feed. Midnight walked to the place
-where the snow was spattered with blood. He sniffed
-and shied back. Standing with legs apart and head bent
-forward, he looked at the frost-coated pile of bones lying
-in the trampled snow. Breaking a trail around the spot he
-moved close to the monarch and began breaking the
-crusted snow. The buck let him feed close to his side
-but when the little horse would have shouldered against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-him he jerked up his head and snorted. He shook his
-bony lances threateningly and Midnight backed away.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight set to work pawing, breaking the crust and
-scooping the loose snow aside. He worked steadily all
-through the day, pausing at intervals to call for his
-mother. Two lean coyotes came out of the spruce and
-slipped across the meadow. A little fox thrust his sleek
-head out of a thicket which had been swept clear of
-snow. He wrinkled his nose as he crept forward. His
-furry, red brush waved back and fourth. Hunger had
-driven the three hunters into the open in the white light
-of day, hunger and the smell of fresh meat. The coyotes
-poked among the bones gnawing and snarling. The little
-fox sat down to watch and to wait. He was sure there
-would be a few bits of gristle left for him.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight snorted and shook his head at the coyotes.
-He pawed into the drift savagely, then rushed at the
-coyotes as far as his trail went. The coyotes leaped back
-from the carcass and faced him snarling and snapping.
-Midnight stared at them for a long time, then turned and
-went back to his feeding. He was learning the lessons
-of the wild.</p>
-
-<p>A lynx cat with tufted ears and big furry pads on his
-feet thrust his head from behind a drift. He, too, had
-forsaken the twilight of the spruce country, which was
-his natural home. He blinked his eyes before the glare
-of the sun and stared at the pair of coyotes and the little
-fox. His nose twitched hungrily. He seldom ventured far
-from the green dusk of the forest but he had eaten
-only one small morsel in two days, a field mouse dug
-from the roots of a dead aspen tree. His green eyes fixed
-on the little fox and he shifted his padded feet nervously.
-He had feasted on fox before and the stringy meat
-was to his liking.</p>
-
-<p>At the same moment the fox’s sharp eyes and pointed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-nose discovered the lynx cat. Turning, the sly one raced
-over the crust toward his burrow in the thicket. The lynx
-cat bounded over the snow, cutting across to head the
-fox away from his hole. The little fox ran swiftly but he
-had a greater distance to go. The cat closed in swiftly
-and the fox whirled to face him. The lynx arched his
-back and circled slowly around his intended victim. He
-knew the fox had deadly fangs and that he would use
-them. The sly one was shy and timid but he could fight
-when cornered. The air was filled with the yowling
-and spitting of the lynx and the snarling of the fox.
-Both coyotes sat up and watched. Midnight and the big
-buck jerked up their heads and stared at the battlers.
-The old buck sniffed the cat scent and made off along
-his trail to the timber. Midnight stood still. He was
-afraid but did not know what to do.</p>
-
-<p>The big lynx cat circled a second time. He was cautious
-even though he was desperately hungry. With a
-lightning movement he leaped at the fox, who was
-crouched down with his chest on the snow. The fox
-leaped to meet him and slashed at him savagely. A big
-tuft of hair from the cat’s neck scruff sailed high and
-floated to the snow. The cat backed away spitting, his
-big feet planted wide apart.</p>
-
-<p>When the lynx leaped back the little fox whirled and
-raced for the timber. He had tricked the cat and his
-red tongue lolled out over his white teeth very much
-as though he was laughing at his clumsy antagonist.</p>
-
-<p>The lynx bounded after him and the fox whirled
-again. Again the fox made a stand and the dweller of
-the spruce twilight circled around him. Again the lynx
-leaped and was met by the lashing fangs of the slim
-hunter of mice. The cat leaped back and red drops of
-blood dotted the snow. Both times his lashing paws had
-missed the dodging, weaving fox. The fox whirled and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-ran, this time almost to his thicket. The lynx bounded
-upon him and he whirled, his brush sweeping across the
-glistening snow.</p>
-
-<p>The lynx did not strike again. If the snow had been
-soft and loose he would have been the victor and would
-have feasted upon the carcass of the tough little fox, because
-his snowshoe feet would have carried him over the
-surface while the fox floundered. The hard crust which
-spelled death for the elk and the deer gave the little fox
-a surer chance to live. Slowly the fox backed to his den
-under the bushes. He halted in the opening and crouched
-there, his muzzle resting on his forepaws, his little eyes
-flaming.</p>
-
-<p>The lynx cat arched his back and sidled up to the
-den, spitting and snarling. He halted well out of reach
-of the flashing attack of the little hunter. He sat down
-and stared back at the fox. Finally he walked away to
-a drift. He hoped the fox would venture away from
-his hole under the bushes. But the fox could see the
-big fellow seated on the drift. He drowsed, his eyes half
-closed, waiting for the killer to tire and go his way.
-Finally the lynx cat got up and padded back into the
-spruce.</p>
-
-<p>Two eagles came and the great owls beat along the
-edge of the clearing. The wolf pack raced down along
-the ridge at dusk, seeking the little stallion. But Midnight
-and the old buck were safe in their shelters long
-before dusk. Both remembered the experience of the
-previous night and left the feed ground early. They
-bedded down on stomachs only half filled, but they
-rested better than the killers who could not get even half
-a meal.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There came days of sunshine and days of storm. When
-the blizzard came the wind swept the new snow across<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
-the hard, smooth surface of the meadow, piling it in the
-timber or swirling it into the deep canyon.</p>
-
-<p>One cloudy day a lean cougar padded through the
-spruce at the upper edge of the mesa. He halted
-and stared out over the sheet of glistening ice. His
-yellow eyes suddenly flamed with eagerness. He had
-sighted the timber-line buck and the little stallion. His
-amber eyes flicked over the old buck and fastened on the
-colt beside him. His nose jerked and the black tip of his
-tail twitched. It seemed almost beyond any good luck to
-find a fat colt and a buck deer together. He had hunted
-for days and was heading toward the lower country. The
-only living things he had met were wolves and coyotes as
-hungry as himself.</p>
-
-<p>The cougar moved to the edge of the woods, his eyes
-wandering over the snowy expanse. It did not seem possible
-for the colt to escape him. The little horse had a
-long way to go to reach cover. The snow was crusted so
-that the killer could bound over it while the horse would
-break through and flounder. He located a drift which ran
-out into the meadow like the fin of a great fish. He would
-slip out along that fin. He would not need to get close.
-His eyes roved eagerly over the meadow, seeking to locate
-any weak point in his plan of attack.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight and the old buck fed steadily, the buck following
-the trail Midnight had broken. He was about
-twenty yards back of the little stallion. Midnight pulled
-a tuft of grass up out of the snow and chewed it eagerly.
-Swallowing it he ducked his head and nosed about for
-more. He pulled another mouthful and looked around
-him. He was fast learning the tricks of the old buck. Look,
-listen, test the air after every exploration under the crust.</p>
-
-<p>It was the buck who warned him of danger. The monarch
-snorted loudly and whirled about. The wind had
-shifted and his keen nose had caught cougar scent. Midnight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-looked and saw the gaunt killer rising above the
-drift in a long, high leap. The big cat screamed savagely,
-angered because he had been discovered before he was
-ready to attack. Midnight plunged after the old buck.
-The cougar landed on the hard crust, skidded, then
-righted himself and bounded again. His leaps were terrific
-and carried him down quickly on the two struggling
-and panic-stricken comrades. His ears were flattened and
-his tail was lashing. His yellow eyes checked the distance
-he had to cover. His last leap must send him smashing
-down on the back of the colt. His tawny body shot upward
-and out in a twenty-foot leap, while his claws unsheathed
-and he bared his fangs for the death thrust.</p>
-
-<p>With a wild plunge of speed Midnight charged past
-the old buck. The ancient monarch was a scarred warrior.
-He had been attacked by cougars before and had always
-managed to escape. This time he was trapped. He could
-not flounder to the deep, soft drifts in the spruce. Like
-any wild thing, he whirled to fight because that was all
-there was left for him to do. He had lived to old age in
-the high country because he had been able to meet desperate
-situations. When he whirled he lowered his sharp
-antlers until they formed a shield for his neck and shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>The leap of the yellow killer had been aimed and timed
-so that its force would smash down on the back of the
-colt. Instead of smashing upon the unprotected back of
-the little horse the cougar landed upon the bony lances
-of the old buck. His hundred pounds of weight hurtling
-down on those horns would have been damaging enough,
-but the old timber-line monarch charged forward just as
-the cat landed, adding to the effectiveness of the defense.
-The buck was smashed back on his haunches, but instantly
-his powerful legs straightened and with a grunt he
-lunged again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The lances of bone drove deep into the chest and neck
-and legs of the cougar. When the buck lunged he twisted
-those knives and drove them deeper. He ripped and tore
-in mad fury. Flight was forgotten now that he was in a
-battle. He thought only of destroying his attacker. The
-cougar was startled by this attack from a prey which had
-always fled in a wild fear before him. He screamed savagely
-as he struggled to toss his body out of the path of
-the ripping horns. Rolling over and over in the snow he
-scrambled away from the charging deer.</p>
-
-<p>The buck made another lunge but the big cat had had
-enough. He bounded away across the snow leaving a trail
-of blood which froze in round red jewels on the crust.</p>
-
-<p>The buck shook his head and snorted savagely. Midnight
-watched him from the safety of the ledge. Finally
-the little horse trotted down the trail to meet the monarch,
-who was stalking along, his rump patch fanned out,
-his breath whistling angrily. Midnight halted before the
-buck, and they stood looking at each other.</p>
-
-<p>After that the bond was a little closer between the two.
-Midnight realized that there was safety in being close to
-the big buck. He was convinced the old fellow was the
-master of the yellow killers so terrifying to him. The monarch
-gave the matter no thought. He had escaped from
-another cougar, but he did not intend to allow one to get
-near him if his nose and his keen sight warned him in
-time. But he followed Midnight’s trail and ate the weeds
-and brush tips the little horse uncovered and left.</p>
-
-<p>So the cold winter passed. The pair who came daily to
-the meadow kept vigilant watch for the killers and
-slipped away from the feed ground early each night. The
-little stallion was nearly as quick of sight and smell as the
-old buck by the time the snow began to soften. They were
-always hungry, never able to dig up enough grass and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-feed to fill their stomachs, but they were also wary and
-alert.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Spring waited for them on the snow-bound meadow
-one morning when they came down to feed. A chinook
-wind was blowing and the air was soft, promising life,
-alive with earthy smells carried up from the lower valleys
-where green things were already growing on the south
-slopes and in the canyons. Midnight bucked and pranced
-excitedly. The old buck shook his head and grunted. He
-was a sad-looking monarch now. His sides were thick
-with matted hair and he had shed one horn so that he was
-forced to carry his head on the side. He moved about
-more timidly and seemed eager to be near the black colt.</p>
-
-<p>The snow settled down and down. At night it froze but
-not with the bitter hardness of the deep winter. Each day
-the snow sank lower and packed harder. It shrank until
-bare patches of meadow appeared. Then it retreated into
-the spruce where it would make its last stand against the
-sun. There were blustery days when snow fell and raw
-winds blew, but this was spring and nothing could halt
-its coming.</p>
-
-<p>The wolves and the coyotes raced across the bare
-ground, leaping over the dirty drifts in the shade, racing
-on and on, as fast as the steady wind which blew up out
-of the green valleys below. The wolves were not seeking
-prey, they were running in pairs, leaping through the
-dusky twilight or the pale moonlight, seeking romance on
-distant ridges, trysting places under the stars.</p>
-
-<p>The resurrection came swiftly. Grass sprouted and
-flowers shoved forth their buds, some of them poking out
-their hardy blossoms at the edges of the drifts in the
-twilight of the woods. But the real and certain arrival of
-spring was announced by the yellowbelly whistlers. They
-awoke and came out of their dens to blink at the sun.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-They romped across the bare meadow and bounded
-among the rocks at the base of the castles. A day or so
-after the whistlers had come out the calico chips appeared.
-They had been ready for some time but had been
-careful not to hurry.</p>
-
-<p>One day the chipmunks appeared. They held a concert
-at once, and the meadow rang with their “chock, chocking.”
-The fat little brownies came with the chipmunks.
-They selected stones and spent much of their time sitting
-in silence looking down into the blue valley. Only the
-cabin at the edge of the timber remained lifeless and
-dead. It went on sleeping. Its one dusty window stared
-out drearily on the lively scene. Its door did not open to
-let the spring air into the cabin, there was no one to open
-it. The willow chair sagged beside the doorstone. It sat
-there much as though it had stepped outside to wait for
-the owner of the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight became restless. He raced around the
-meadow and mud flew from his hoofs as he splashed
-through puddles in the hollows. The only spot he avoided
-was the dog town. There the ground was soft and the
-holes made it treacherous. The dogs barked and scolded
-when he thundered past but they accepted him as one of
-them. He whinnied and kicked and pranced. The old
-whistler, perched on his high lookout, stretched his neck,
-chuckled several times, then pulled his head back into
-his ball of fur.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight still used the shelter under the rim. Habit
-made him return to it at dusk. The old timber-line buck
-knocked off his remaining horn, then wandered into the
-twilight of the spruce and did not come out again. He
-would seek a sun-drenched glade where he could nurse
-his new antlers through the period when they were in the
-velvet. In a short time nubbins of furry, blood-filled soft
-horns would appear, rising from the scars of his old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-spread. During this time the monarch would be quiet and
-shy. He would not fight and he would avoid charges
-which would take him into the timber.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight was climbing the ledge trail one night when
-he was faced by a strange and terrible creature. A great
-silvertip, with the sleep of winter still dulling his little
-eyes, came shambling down the narrow ledge. He was
-gaunt and in a savage mood. Midnight had come to consider
-this as his own trail. He had met the wolf pack almost
-on the spot where he now stood. He snorted and
-reared on his hind feet. The old silvertip kept on shambling
-toward him. Midnight laid back his ears and
-squealed. The ledge was too narrow to turn about easily,
-and it was his ledge.</p>
-
-<p>Then the little stallion got a good whiff of rank bear
-scent and panic seized him. He tried to whirl about but
-the ledge was too narrow. The very thing that had made
-the ledge safe for him against the wolf pack made it a
-trap now. He reared again and his trim hoofs lashed out
-at the massive head and hairy chest of the silvertip.</p>
-
-<p>The old bear saw the little horse for the first time when
-Midnight reared. His great jaws opened and a roar came
-up from his chest. He did not desire meat to eat, he
-wanted certain herbs and he wanted cold water, things
-to help his shrunken stomach adjust itself. But he never
-gave the trail to any except the skunk and the wolverine.
-In his present mood he was ready to smash anything that
-tried to halt him.</p>
-
-<p>He straightened up and stood like a shaggy giant, advancing
-as a man would. One massive paw swept out.
-The blow struck Midnight with glancing force. Had it
-landed squarely it would have finished him. It over-balanced
-him and he slid off the trail. Kicking and lashing
-he plunged over the canyon rim.</p>
-
-<p>The old silvertip shoved a swaying head over the edge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-and growled deeply, then he ambled down the trail and
-headed across the meadow, growling and grunting to
-himself. The yellow-belly sentinel blasted shrilly and the
-little dwellers of the meadow raced to their dens. The
-dogs slid down their runways and defiant “squit-tucks”
-came out of the ground. The silvertip paid no attention to
-the commotion he had caused. He strode on across the
-mesa.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight dropped a few yards and landed with a
-thump on another ledge. A pile of earth matted with
-grass and berry bushes broke his fall. His head hung over
-a yawning chasm. Quickly he gathered himself together
-and scrambled to his feet. For a few minutes he stood
-pressing against the rock wall and trembling; he saw that
-he was on a ledge which sloped gently down to the
-meadow. There was no chance to leap back to the trail
-above, so he moved along the cliff, sliding, crowding
-against the wall.</p>
-
-<p>He slid off the ledge onto solid ground matted with dry
-grass. He was in a cup-shaped hollow on the side of the
-canyon wall. He trotted through a matted tangle of willow
-and brush to the edge of the basin. From where he
-stood he could look down into Shadow Canyon. He could
-see the foaming waters of the Crazy Kill River. But a
-sheer wall prevented him from climbing down, so he explored
-the hollow.</p>
-
-<p>There were not more than seven acres in the basin.
-Aspens grew close together over most of the ground, except
-in the center where a beaver colony had cut them
-away. In this clearing nestled a tiny lake. Two old beavers
-were swimming around in the water, inspecting the
-horseshoe-shaped dam at the lower side. When Midnight
-halted at the edge of the water the old beavers dived,
-slapping their tails with explosive sounds.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight turned away from the lake. He did not like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-the confining feel of this little mesa. He limped as he
-walked and his shoulder pained him, but he was not hurt
-badly. He wandered all the way around the mesa and discovered
-no trail leading off it except at the lower end
-where a ten-foot crevice cut through a ledge along the
-side of the canyon wall. He turned back and began feeding
-uneasily on the green shoots pushing up through the
-dead grass.</p>
-
-<p>The old beavers came up again and set to work. A
-ptarmigan strutted in the dry leaves under the aspens
-and a snowshoe rabbit hopped out of a thicket. The big
-bunny sat down and began nibbling on a tender weed-stalk.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="ix" id="ix"></a>9. Prisoner</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Midnight</span> fed on the rich, new grass until he was no
-longer hungry, then he made another trip around the rim
-and along the cliff wall. He wanted to escape from this
-tight little pasture. The only avenue of escape lay across
-the crevice and along the ledge beyond. Midnight stood
-at the edge of the yawning abyss and shook his head restlessly.
-The leap was a long one, too long for him to try.</p>
-
-<p>The little stallion turned back to the beaver lake. The
-pair of beavers were busily lacing willows along the top
-of their dam. As they wove the willows into place they
-plastered black mud on them. They were master engineers,
-and their dam was sturdy and strong. They
-stopped work and gazed at Midnight but they did not
-plunge into the water. They accepted him as one of the
-dwellers of their little world under the rim, a harmless
-animal who would not attack them.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight trotted into the aspen grove and lay down.
-Above him green buds were bursting and pale-green
-leaves had begun to show. The bushes along the wall
-were leaved out and many flowers bloomed. The little
-mesa lay facing the sun. Its protected acreage afforded
-growing things a chance to get started before other mesas
-came to life. The spot Midnight had picked for his bed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-was near the cliff face. He could see the rim above. A
-group of five Englemann’s spruce grew near the wall.
-Their straight trunks towered well above the rim and
-looked out across the high mesa where the cabin stood.
-One of them grew so close to the cliff face that its trunk
-touched the rim above.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight drowsed, his eyes fixed lazily upon the leaning
-spruce. Suddenly they popped wide open. He saw a
-big brown bear slide off the rim above and come down
-the trunk, sliding and scraping the bark loose in a shower
-of wood bits. The bear was descending tail first, moving
-around the tree as he came down.</p>
-
-<p>The black colt scrambled to his feet. The memory of
-the savage silvertip was fresh in his mind. He tossed his
-head and snorted loudly. The brown bear halted his descent
-and peered down at him, then began to slide again.
-Then Midnight saw another bear, larger than the first,
-swinging off the mesa above. The big fellow came down
-amid a shower of bark and twigs. Midnight whirled and
-fled as far as he could get away from the spruces. He
-halted and stood watching the two bears, ready to dodge
-and run if they charged at him.</p>
-
-<p>The two bears paid no attention to Midnight. They
-grunted and growled as they walked into the aspen
-grove, where they prowled about rooting into the dead
-leaves, overturning rotting logs. Then both sat up letting
-their big paws droop over their shaggy bellies. They sat
-looking up at the spruce trees. Down the leaning tree
-came two more bears. Midnight pawed frantically but he
-was as far away from the bears as he could get. The two
-newcomers joined the first pair in the aspen grove. There
-was much growling and grunting, with many deep woofs
-added. Midnight remained where he was, trembling and
-pawing the ground. Within an hour seven bears had arrived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-by way of the leaning spruce, and the grove was
-noisy with their gruff voices.</p>
-
-<p>One he-bear walked to an aspen tree. Lifting himself
-to his full height he gashed a mark on the trunk with his
-teeth. Another male, who had been sitting watching him,
-got to his feet and walked to the tree. He gashed the tree
-higher than the other had been able to reach. Then a big
-fellow with a furry red face strolled to the tree. He
-grunted several times as he stood up. He marked the tree
-a full six inches above the highest mark, then dropped to
-the ground and faced the other bears. The males backed
-away from him as though recognizing his superior
-prowess. He strolled to one of the she-bears and nosed
-against her. She accepted the caress and the big male
-turned toward the spruce trees. He ambled to the leaning
-tree and started to climb. The she-bear followed him
-obediently.</p>
-
-<p>One of the other males edged close to a female, rumbling
-in his chest as he moved toward her. Another male
-stepped forward and the two big fellows faced each
-other. An angry argument followed. The aspen grove
-rang with the roars of the two males, but they did not
-fight. One of them backed away and the other led the
-she-bear to the sloping spruce in triumph. They went up
-the tree and out on the mesa.</p>
-
-<p>There were two males and one female left. The smaller
-fellow, a smudged, black-faced bear, had edged close to
-the last she-bear. He woofed and grunted in an attempt
-to get her to go with him, but she just sat and looked up
-into the aspen branches. The larger he-bear walked toward
-her. The little bear with the black face crowded in
-front of her, growling warningly.</p>
-
-<p>The big bear shuffled up to him, reared, and cuffed him
-hard alongside of the head. The little fellow danced up
-and down and his roars shook the branches of the aspens<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-and echoed along the rock walls, but he backed away
-from the she-bear.</p>
-
-<p>The big fellow walked around her and grunted deeply.
-Then he headed toward the leaning tree against the wall.
-She followed him while the little bear sat with a sad expression
-on his face watching them. He remained where
-he was until they had climbed out onto the mesa above.
-He whined a little, ambled to the tree, and began climbing
-out of the basin.</p>
-
-<p>The love moon of the bears had risen. This secluded
-spot was the scene of their first summer romancing. The
-pairs would wander away into the woods and remain together
-for a while. Midnight did not understand the nature
-of the gathering, but he did realize that they had not
-come to the mesa prison to attack him. He edged out toward
-the grove which reeked with bear scent. Snorting
-and jerking his head, he trotted around to the lower end
-of the mesa where he nibbled a few blades of grass. The
-wind carried the strong bear smell to him and he moved
-to the upper end again where he bedded down for the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Then next morning while Midnight was feeding close
-to the beaver lake he met another stranger. The animal
-was not large and it waddled along at a slow pace. It had
-long, yellowish hair and it seemed too dull-witted and
-slow to be dangerous. Midnight advanced. The dull-witted
-one lifted the hair on his back but otherwise paid no
-attention to the little horse.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had never met a porcupine. He thought the
-spines sticking out of his back were long hairs. The dull
-gnawer of bark sat down when Midnight got close to
-him. Only his tail moved, jerking up and down. Midnight
-extended his soft muzzle and sniffed in a friendly manner.
-He kept his legs planted wide so that he could leap if the
-porky came to life suddenly and attacked him. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-gnawer did not move, he huddled into a ball of spiny fur,
-pulling his head back until only the tip of his snout
-showed. Midnight tossed his head and pawed, his nose
-extended closer as he sniffed and sniffed. Suddenly he
-felt a quick stab of pain in his tender muzzle. He leaped
-back with a snort. An ivory barb that was half black with
-ebony stuck out of his lower lip.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight galloped away through the aspens, across the
-little meadow to the far side. The pain in his lip increased
-as the barb dug deeper. He halted and thrust his muzzle
-into the fresh, black dirt of a pocket-gopher mound. He
-raked his nose back and forth in the damp earth. The cool
-dirt soothed the burning sting but it also drove the barb
-deeper into the tender flesh. Midnight next tried rubbing
-the wounded spot against the trunk of a tree. The quill
-caught in the rough bark and pulled free. It came away
-red with a little piece of Midnight’s flesh clinging to it.</p>
-
-<p>After that he left the dull gnawer of bark strictly alone.
-The porky fed on the meadow or in the tops of the low
-bushes where he hung like a spiny ball. His clicking
-grumble could be heard at any time during the day.</p>
-
-<p>And each day Midnight circled his prison seeking a
-way to get off the mesa. He was uneasy and wanted more
-room. There was plenty of feed and there was water, but
-there was no room to gallop. The confinement worried
-him. He was not like the dull porky or the beavers, he
-was used to wide spaces and an elevation from which he
-could look down on the world. From the little mesa he
-could see nothing but trees, the canyon wall, and the
-lake.</p>
-
-<p>One day late in the spring two men rode down past the
-cabin at the edge of the mesa. The meadow was green
-with waving grass, flowers rioted in their hurry to produce
-seed before the brief high-country summer slipped
-away. The ridges were blue with lupine or gold with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-mountain daisies. In the shade clumps of columbine lifted
-their delicate blue bells, exposing white hearts. Major
-Howard and his range boss, Tex, were riding together.</p>
-
-<p>Tex halted near the upper end of the meadow. He slid
-to the ground and bent over a scattered mass of bones.
-Major Howard lighted his pipe and waited. The eyes of
-the range boss were intent. He remained bent over the
-bones so long that the major spoke impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s so interesting about a pile of bones?”</p>
-
-<p>Tex straightened and his eyes wandered to Sam’s cabin
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Winter kill by a pack of wolves,” he said briefly.</p>
-
-<p>“A horse the boys missed in the roundup?” the major
-asked with a show of interest.</p>
-
-<p>Tex nodded. “Some hide and hair left,” he said and his
-slow smile showed for a moment. “I reckon this hoss was
-Lady Ebony.”</p>
-
-<p>The major did not dismount. But he turned his horse
-and stared down at the bones. He knew what Tex was
-thinking and it irritated him. He shook his head grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t be,” he said shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“I figure it that way,” Tex answered. “It explains a lot
-of things fer me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never did think old Sam stole that mare,” Major
-Howard said.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Tex replied quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“I did and I still do. You cow-country boys are too soft-livered.
-The old fellow left his cabin for three weeks or
-so. He refused to tell where he had been. He had three
-hundred dollars in cash to pay an attorney. He refused to
-tell where he got the money.” The major’s lips pulled into
-a tight line. “You’ll have to dig up more proof than that
-pile of bones.” He was staring at the desolate cabin, trying
-hard to urge away the doubt Tex had raised in his
-mind. Major Howard was at heart fair and honest. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-smiled suddenly. “I wouldn’t be surprised to see that
-mare at one of the races this summer.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex shook his head. “You won’t see her at any track,
-boss.” He paused and his gaze was somber; he was
-watching the chipmunks romping in the grass over by the
-castle rocks. Sam had brought those little fellers in. He’d
-be right surprised to know there was at least a half dozen
-more of them now. Tex made a mental note of the increase.
-He’d tell Sam when he stopped by to see him.</p>
-
-<p>“The old fool is better off where he is. He has decent
-grub and a warm place to sleep,” the major said gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>“He don’t seem much interested in anything. Did ask if
-the mare showed up, though, when I stopped by to see
-him.” Tex swung into his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>“You let your feelings get the best of you,” the major
-said. It irritated him the way Tex stubbornly clung to his
-belief that Sam was innocent. “Besides, he came near killing
-a man,” the major added as though to clinch the argument.</p>
-
-<p>Tex said no more. The major was not his kind. He was
-really a stranger in the high country, and a good deal of a
-tenderfoot in many ways. Like Sam, Tex had lived all his
-life in the rough mountain country. The range boss had
-long since ceased trying to understand his employer.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he did plug that deputy,” he agreed. His
-manner and tone said plainly that he would have done
-the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>They rode on in silence. Tex drew himself into his shell
-and spoke only when he had to answer a question, but
-he kept thinking about the pile of bones. He thought of
-Sam too. The last time Tex visited the old fellow Sam had
-a strange look in his eyes. Tex could not forget that look;
-it haunted him. It was a homesick, lonesome look.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="x" id="x"></a>10. Escape</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Midnight</span> was never quite satisfied within the confining
-walls of his prison. There was plenty of fine grass, shade,
-and water, but the constant feeling that he was being
-held a prisoner irked him. He worked out a route around
-the outer limits of the meadow which gave him a chance
-to run. There was an open stretch along the high walls.
-From there he made a trail above the beaver lake through
-a pile of slide rock that had fallen from the cliff above.
-The trail swung to the lip of the canyon, following a
-crooked course until it curved back and around the lake
-again. Big rocks and fallen trees offered barriers. The
-little stallion soon learned to take these barriers in clean
-jumps which sent the blood pounding through him.</p>
-
-<p>The racing gave him an outlet for his energy, a chance
-to give play to his growing muscles. Snorting, shying, and
-whinnying shrilly he would race around and around, his
-mane and tail flying, his nostrils flaring. The exercise kept
-his body tough and hard. The blood of the chestnut stallion
-which flowed in his veins would not let him surrender
-to the peaceful existence offered by the sheltered
-meadow.</p>
-
-<p>Midsummer found the little horse rapidly growing into
-a big and powerful brute with a body which combined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-the slender legs, the intelligent head, and the great heart
-of Lady Ebony with the rugged strength of his father.
-His eyes betrayed the wild horse in him. They flashed
-white rims when he was excited or angry and he bared
-his teeth savagely when roused.</p>
-
-<p>One day Midnight heard sounds which excited him
-greatly. They came from the mesa above. He heard the
-pounding of many hoofs and above the nickering and
-snorting of mares rose the squeal of a stallion challenging
-the world defiantly. Midnight was resting in the shade of
-the aspen grove after a wild run around the meadow. He
-dashed out into the open and stood staring at the top of
-the canyon wall.</p>
-
-<p>As he stood there a horse appeared. A pinto filly stood
-with lowered head looking down into the canyon. She
-was a trim little mare with a lithe, slender body and a
-yellow mane and tail which flowed in the breeze. Midnight
-called to her eagerly and she turned her head to
-locate him. Her ears pricked forward as she answered his
-call with a quick eager whinny. Instantly wild excitement
-surged through the black. He raced back and forth, keeping
-in the open, looking up at the pinto as he danced and
-kicked.</p>
-
-<p>The little mare seemed to appreciate his efforts. She
-edged closer to the rim and nickered softly. The sound of
-her call sent Midnight leaping through the timber,
-pounding around the trail he had made. As he flashed
-into the sunlighted spaces below the rim he looked up to
-see her standing still, cut sharply against the sky, looking
-down at him. Again Midnight raced around his beaten
-pathway. As he flashed past the crevice which barred
-him from escape he halted and stared at the wide crack
-in the rock shelf. The trail beyond that fissure led to the
-little mare!</p>
-
-<p>Midnight
-<a name="backed" id="backed"></a><ins title="Original has 'back'">backed</ins>
-away a few yards, lowered his head,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
-and sniffed. He suddenly lost his fear of the deep gash in
-the earth. With a defiant squeal he charged straight at the
-gaping crack. His flying hoofs sent rocks sailing into the
-canyon below. As he charged down on the barrier he
-gathered his hard muscles under him for the long leap.
-Like a black meteor he shot through the air. Leaping
-over barriers along this race course had given Midnight
-needed training. His body arched as he hurtled into space
-above the crevice. His forefeet reached for the far ledge,
-landed and clung while he lashed with his hind feet in an
-attempt to pull himself to safety. For a moment he hung
-there, poised above the chasm, plunging and struggling,
-then he stumbled forward, safe on the ledge trail.</p>
-
-<p>Snorting and kicking, he pounded up the ledge until
-he came to the main trail leading out of Shadow Canyon.
-Doubling back along that trail he charged upward. With
-a clattering of loose stones he burst out on the edge of the
-meadow and halted to look for the pinto. The little mare
-had turned away from the rim. She stood looking at him,
-her neck arched, her mane blowing around her shoulders.
-She nickered and pawed at the grass tufts under her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight plunged toward her, eager to make friends.
-When he was within a few yards of her she whirled and
-fled. Midnight raced after her, calling wildly. The pinto
-ran toward the band of mares feeding in the center of the
-mesa. Above them the chestnut stallion stood guard, his
-sleek coat gleaming in the sun, his massive head erect.
-His protruding eyes watched the pinto as she raced toward
-the mares with the black colt close behind her. Midnight’s
-speed was greater than that of the little mare and
-he was soon racing shoulder to shoulder with her.</p>
-
-<p>A scream of rage broke from the chestnut stallion. With
-ears laid back, nostrils flaring, he charged to meet Midnight.
-His teeth were bared and his eyes flamed. He
-meant to finish this young upstart at once. Midnight saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-him coming and shoved over against the little mare,
-heading her away from the band. The boss of the herd
-came on at top speed. He was running at an angle to the
-course the two colts had taken.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had no fear of the big stallion. He was so
-wildly glad to see a band of horses that he had no thought
-of battling any of them. The chestnut came on with terrific
-force. He struck Midnight a smashing blow which
-turned the colt halfway around and sent him staggering.
-Midnight twisted and fought to keep from going down.
-The chestnut reared and lashed out with his forefeet. His
-teeth reached for the colt’s shoulder and his scream rang
-across the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>As Midnight righted himself a terrible rage took him.
-He wanted to fight the big stallion, to smash him, to tear
-him. Swerving, he let the little mare dart into the band,
-then he whirled to meet the chestnut. The big stallion
-was eager for the kill. He had smashed young stallions
-before, driving them out of the band, and he expected to
-make short work of this fellow. Midnight answered the
-challenge by lunging to meet the leader’s second charge.
-The big stallion raised his heavy hoofs and met Midnight’s
-attack with smashing blows which battered the
-colt back. Pain brought a realization that the big stallion
-wanted to kill him just as the wolf pack had often tried.
-He dodged the next attack, but lunged in as the chestnut
-missed his target.</p>
-
-<p>His feint only half saved him. The chestnut’s teeth
-ripped his shoulder and a crushing blow staggered him.
-Midnight leaped away from the next charge, which came
-as soon as the big fellow could wheel about. The little
-black was outweighed and his strength was nothing compared
-with that of the chestnut. The band of mares
-watched without showing much excitement. The pinto<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-stood in their midst, her ears well forward, her eyes rolling.</p>
-
-<p>When the chestnut charged again Midnight whirled
-and fled. He raced away down the meadow with the big
-stallion thundering after him. The chestnut was filled
-with savage eagerness. The victory was his and he meant
-to overtake this black stallion and kill him. But Midnight
-was the son of Lady Ebony, and had her fleetness. For a
-short distance he sprinted as fast as he could run and in
-that time discovered that he could easily outrun the big
-leader of the band. When he had satisfied himself of this
-he circled around the meadow whinnying defiantly and
-kicking up his heels.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut was wild with savage rage. He thundered
-after the flying colt, but though he strained every
-muscle he could not overtake Midnight. Nor could he
-seem to outwind or tire him. The colt raced and dodged
-without seeming to feel the terrific pace. Around the mesa
-they raced, then around again. The chestnut began to
-tire. His breath was whistling from his nostrils and his
-flanks were streaked with lather. Suddenly he swerved
-and came to a halt beside the band of mares. Blowing and
-snorting he pawed defiantly, challenging Midnight to
-come and fight. Midnight halted and nickered eagerly to
-the pinto filly.</p>
-
-<p>The pinto answered his call. This angered the chestnut
-and he whirled to lunge at her. Before the little mare
-could leap aside, his big body smashed against her and
-his teeth sank deep into the fleshy part of her back.
-Squealing and kicking, the pinto sprawled on her side in
-the grass. The chestnut reared threateningly as she scrambled
-to her feet. With a squeal of fright the pinto darted
-out of the band and ran away across the mesa. The chestnut
-did not follow far. He was watching Midnight, fearing
-the black would try to steal some of his harem.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Midnight leaped after the pinto. He soon overtook her
-and raced along beside her. The chestnut stallion was
-furious. He forgot the other mares and plunged after the
-colts. His speed was great enough to overtake the pinto,
-and he forced her back into the band. Midnight charged
-the big fellow and the chestnut whirled to give battle.
-The filly raced in among the mares and stood watching.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut was eager to close with Midnight again.
-He lunged in and his weight sent Midnight staggering
-back. Then he lunged once more, before the black could
-get his balance. He landed squarely against Midnight’s
-shoulder and the colt went down. He rolled and lunged
-while massive hoofs pounded him and the chestnut’s
-teeth ripped gashes along his side. Finally Midnight staggered
-to his feet. He ducked drunkenly and saved himself
-from another smashing blow from the shoulder of the
-chestnut. Pain stabbed through his shoulder joint and
-hampered his speed as he tried to run away. The chestnut
-sensed that his victory was about to be complete. With
-squeals of triumph he charged on the colt. Midnight
-thought of the ledge trail where he had always found
-haven when wolves and cougars came. If he could reach
-that ledge he would make a stand.</p>
-
-<p>Desperately the little stallion plunged toward the
-castle rocks. The chestnut overtook him and smashed him
-aside, but Midnight dodged and raced on, not stopping
-to fight. Again the chestnut smashed him, his teeth ripping
-gashes across Midnight’s rump. The black staggered
-and weaved under the terrible battering but he kept going.
-He reached the ledge and plunged upward with the
-chestnut slashing at his back, trying to smash him to the
-ground where he could finish the fight.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight tried to whirl about on the ledge. He suddenly
-realized that if the big fellow got him trapped in
-the shelter at the end of the trail the chestnut would kill<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-him. He managed to turn around and face the charging
-leader of the band. They smashed together and Midnight
-went down, sprawling and kicking on the narrow ledge.
-He rolled over and his hoofs slid over the rim. In a moment
-he was sliding down over the edge.</p>
-
-<p>Screaming and pawing, the chestnut glared over the
-rim. He saw his adversary land on a shelf below and stagger
-slowly to his feet. The big stallion raced up and down
-the trail but saw no way to reach the colt below.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The spot where Midnight landed was only a few yards
-below the place where he had landed when the silvertip
-shoved him over the edge. He got to his feet panting and
-blowing. For a long time he stood trembling, favoring his
-pain-raked shoulder. Then with a squeal of defiance he
-hobbled along the ledge and down to the little meadow
-where he had lived before the band came to the mesa. He
-was eager to cross the crevice again and join the horses
-above, but when he reached the aspen grove he halted to
-ease the pains shooting through his shoulder. After a bit
-he moved on. He halted at the edge of the crevice and
-stood listening. He did not try to leap across the narrow
-chasm, he would have to wait until the pain left his shoulder.
-Above he could hear the triumphant snorting and
-calling of the chestnut stallion. Slowly he turned and
-walked back to the aspen grove. After a time he lay down
-on a bed of dead leaves and grass.</p>
-
-<p>He lay still and listened. From the mesa came the
-sounds of the feeding herd. For a time the chestnut
-pranced about nickering and snorting. The mares fed
-eagerly, not paying any attention to him, except when he
-came close to one of them. The ears of the little horse in
-the aspen grove followed every sound intently. He
-snorted and struggled painfully to his feet when the chestnut
-blasted a warning to the mares. There was a rolling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-thunder of hoofs as the wild band charged across the
-mesa and into the timber. Midnight tried to race to the
-crevice but at the first step he stumbled and almost fell.
-Slowly he hobbled to the edge where he stood shaking his
-head and calling loudly. The rhythm of the pounding
-hoofs died away quickly and Midnight was alone again.
-He turned back and hobbled at a slow walk toward his
-bed in the aspen grove.</p>
-
-<p>In the days which followed Midnight listened for the
-sound of racing hoofs and the whinny of the band, but
-the big stallion did not lead the mares back to the high
-mesa. He ranged far up on the side of the Crazy Kills
-where the trails were steep and broken and the meadows
-small and surrounded by dense cover. In the barrens
-close to timber line few cattle ranged and none of Major
-Howard’s riders cared to make the steep climb, knowing
-the stray cows that climbed up that high would come
-down long before roundup time.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight dropped into his former way of living. As
-soon as his shoulder became sound he began making his
-usual rounds of the little race course. And many times he
-charged to the edge of the crevice where he would slide
-to a halt and stand snorting and shaking his head. His leg
-was still stiff, too stiff for so long a jump, and he did not
-have the nearness of mares to fill him with wild excitement.
-He did not forget the wild band and the pinto filly,
-but his wild desire for freedom was not hot and driving.
-His body filled out and his legs and chest took on a ruggedness
-which made him lose the coltish look.</p>
-
-<p>The old beavers increased their efforts. Helped by a
-brood of youngsters, they cut trees and peeled bark from
-early morning until late at night. They had long since
-ceased to worry about being about by daylight. The
-seclusion of the little meadow had changed their habits a
-great deal. Their storehouses were bulging but they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-worked feverishly anyway, as though they were facing a
-famine period. And they built houses over the land openings
-where their runways came to the surface of the
-meadow, tall piles of mud and sticks, laced together and
-padded down into a tough, warm masonry which would
-keep out the biting frosts of winter. Midnight watched
-them lazily. He could not know they were expecting another
-hard winter. But he did have an uneasy feeling
-when the first frosts came. The wild strain in his blood
-stirred and he would have left the high country had he
-been free to go. One morning he trotted to the edge of
-the meadow and found it white with glistening frost. The
-white carpet disturbed him. He rushed to the edge of the
-crevice and stood there snorting and pawing. But he did
-not try the long jump.</p>
-
-<p>The frosts deepened. The aspen leaves swirled down
-to cover the roots, the bulbs and the seeds bedded under
-the soft loam. The grass turned brown and the big spruce
-trees standing close to the wall moaned as a cold wind
-swept down from the new snow fields high on the barren
-peaks of the Crazy Kills. The haze of an Indian summer
-day was swept away by the first snow of winter and again
-the world turned white and the air became snapping
-cold. Midnight put on his heavy robe of shaggy hair
-which turned the sharp blasts whirling downward.</p>
-
-<p>The snow deepened and Midnight dug for grass. He
-moved his bedground to a needle-padded spot under a
-giant spruce where the snow never fell. Now he was interested
-only in a battle to keep his belly filled. He was
-still growing and his body demanded food for new muscles
-and sinews as well as for warmth. The storms came
-and the snow on the meadow became deeper and deeper.
-The mesa above was lashed by bitter winds but the sheltered
-meadow did not feel their lash. On its surface the
-snow settled down in loose, deep smoothness which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-formed a warm blanket for the grass and the flowers.
-Great drifts formed along the rim above, fanned out by
-the wind and the drifting snow on the upper bench.
-Their white lips thrust far out over the edge of the canyon
-like the rounded curves of giant mushrooms.</p>
-
-<p>One
-<a name="moonlit" id="moonlit"></a><ins title="Original has 'moonlight'">moonlit</ins>
-night as Midnight lay on his dry bed
-of needles he heard a strange sound and felt the earth
-tremble under him. The sound came from the rim above.
-He peered upward but could see nothing except the protruding
-snowbanks and the gleaming whiteness of the
-world outside his shelter. The sound was a deep, grating
-rumble that reminded him of distant thunder. One of the
-overhanging lips of snow had broken under the great
-weight of tons of snow and had settled down. For a few
-minutes it moved slowly, grinding rocks off the wall, settling,
-sliding, packing the snow into ice. Then its speed
-increased and the dull rumble broke into a terrible roar
-as thousands of tons of snow shot downward. Midnight
-leaped to his feet and trembled as he watched.</p>
-
-<p>The mass of snow plunged and boiled as it shot downward.
-It seethed around a stand of spruce. The big trees,
-many of them several feet through at the butt, jerked and
-swayed like saplings, then went down to be swallowed up
-by the maelstrom of ice and snow. Boulders were torn
-from their beds and from the face of the cliff. They were
-ground to sand in the maw of the slide. The whole cataract
-became dirty gray in color. Its roar shook the mesa
-as it poured into Shadow Canyon. A startled snowshoe
-rabbit, routed from his bed under a fallen log, leaped
-into the air, plunged forward, then bounced high as the
-dirty mass caught him. For a moment he hung above the
-seething mass, then dropped into it and vanished, ground
-to nothingness.</p>
-
-<p>The slide struck the lower end of the little mesa. It shot
-into the deep crevice, filling it full, then boiling over to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-roll on down into the main canyon. It cut a swath through
-the spruces and aspens growing on the steep slope of the
-big gulch. The timber went down like grass before the
-bar of a mowing machine.</p>
-
-<p>The white death was only a few seconds in passing but
-it struck fear into the heart of the black stallion. He
-snorted and pawed excitedly. And he was not alone in his
-fear. Up on the high mesa the old timber-line buck, who
-had returned to his feed grounds, leaped from his bed
-under a spruce. He stood staring out into the white world,
-rigid, shaking his heavy antlers and grunting. Every wild
-creature within hearing stopped and listened, tense,
-ready to break and run. They all knew the terror of the
-white death and each knew that to try to dash away
-would be useless because of the terrible speed and the
-uncertainty of the course it would take. They would try
-to run if it came hurtling upon them, but until they saw
-it they did not move. It was an hour before Midnight
-bedded down again.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the colt plowed his way to his feed
-ground near the beaver lake. He stood for a time staring
-at the spot where the crevice had been. The deep fissure
-was filled with dirty snow, yellow, resin-oozing timbers,
-torn and ripped apart, and broken boulders. It was
-packed as hard as the frozen surface of a lake. Carefully
-Midnight ventured out on it and found it solid. His
-weight did not make it settle at all.</p>
-
-<p>He worked his way step by step across the dirty snow,
-then headed up the trail leading to the meadow. The
-snow was so deep he had to plunge, rising on his forefeet
-and lunging. When he rested the snow pressed close
-against his sides. Coming out on top he halted to look
-out across the meadow. A sharp, icy wind cut at him and
-loose snow swirled around his legs. He saw the old timber-line
-buck digging for weeds near the timber. Midnight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-whinnied eagerly and plunged toward the ancient
-one. The old buck jerked up his head and watched Midnight
-as he floundered across the mesa. They met and
-stood staring at each other for some time. Finally the
-buck turned his back and began digging again. Midnight
-set to work pawing for grass.</p>
-
-<p>Bitter winds swept across the meadow and cut through
-Midnight’s shaggy coat. Snow swirled before the wind
-and piled into deep drifts. The mesa was more bleak and
-icy than the little meadow under the rim. And the grass
-was not so good when it was uncovered. But the black
-stallion had companionship of a sort. He worked busily
-all that day to fill his belly with grass. At dusk he headed
-toward his haven under the rim. Darkness settled before
-he reached the canyon trail and the moonlight gleamed
-on the snow. Midnight was tired when he reached his dry
-bed under the big spruce.</p>
-
-<p>After that he stayed on the bench under the rim. It was
-warmer down under the wall and the grass was easier to
-get. He could dig without much effort. Now that he knew
-he could leave the little mesa whenever he chose he did
-not want to go.</p>
-
-<p>Up on the high mesa the old buck was finding life hard.
-He had no help in digging for food and his legs were stiff,
-with a tightness he had never felt before. Age was slowing
-the spring in his powerful muscles. His horns still held
-patches of velvet. The patches clung in dry, furry spots
-on his polished lances. The old buck had not had the
-energy to polish them and scrub them as he should have.
-Midnight did not know that he had deserted his friend at
-a time when the ancient monarch needed him badly.</p>
-
-<p>Late one afternoon the black stallion was startled by a
-familiar cry. A pack of lobo wolves had swept out of the
-spruce at the edge of the meadow above. Their cry came
-when they sighted the old timber-line buck, and the cry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-was the cry of the kill. Midnight plunged to his shelter
-under the big spruce and stood there tossing his black
-mane. His eyes rolled white and he snorted savagely.</p>
-
-<p>Up on the mesa the old buck had whirled about to
-dash for the safety of the timber and the castle rocks. He
-had ample time to escape and should have outdistanced
-his pursuers, but his stiffened legs refused to lift with the
-smooth power he had always possessed. Before he was
-halfway to cover the pack was leaping around him, their
-yellow eyes flaming, their red tongues jerking over white
-fangs.</p>
-
-<p>There on the flat mesa the old monarch made his last
-stand. With sweeping, thrusting antlers he met the leaping
-attack of the gray killers. They darted and lunged
-and dodged around him, keeping up a mad chorus of
-yelping and snarling. The old buck could not guard his
-vital parts against all the wolves. One after another they
-slid under his frantic, thrusting antlers to rip gashes in his
-flanks and legs. Snorting and blowing savagely he fought
-with horns and lashing hoofs.</p>
-
-<p>The wolves knew they would win and they kept up
-their ripping, tearing tactics, never fastening on the big
-fellow long enough for his sharp hoofs to strike them.
-Weakened by the loss of blood, staggering as each new
-wound opened, the old fellow fought his way stubbornly
-toward the timber. Every foot of his retreating trail was
-marked by bloody, trampled snow.</p>
-
-<p>One of the wolves, taking advantage of the slowing
-thrusts of the old buck’s antlers, dodged in and slashed
-the tendons of a hind leg. Slowly, with antlers still lashing,
-the old monarch settled down into the snow and lay
-beating with his forelegs and jerking his head. Instantly
-every wolf was on him and their howls were more savage
-than before.</p>
-
-<p>The end of the monarch was the destined end of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span>
-wild dwellers. The end of a life of struggle and constant
-alertness. The law of the wild was fulfilled. While youth
-and vigor gave him power and speed the buck lived and
-went his way, but when that strength slipped from him
-he went down before the gray killers.</p>
-
-<p>Under the big spruce Midnight stood listening to the
-growling and snarling of the pack as they tore the warm
-flesh from the bones of the old buck. He watched and
-waited, expecting the pack to come leaping down the
-ledge trail and across the slide-filled fissure. But they did
-not scent him because the wind always blew off the high
-mesa and seldom came up out of the canyon except in the
-spring. When the killers had stripped the bones and
-cracked the ones their powerful jaws could break they
-left the mangled carcass and raced away through the
-moonlight, seeking another victim.</p>
-
-<p>Then the little fox came out of his den and a pair of
-coyotes trotted up from the shadows under the spruce at
-the lower end of the mesa. The little fox and the coyotes
-fought over the bones, dragging them away to spots
-where they could lie down and gnaw them or crack them
-and lick the still warm marrow fat from their centers.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xi" id="xi"></a>11. New Trails</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Spring</span> came with a chinook and a sudden thaw which
-broke a week of bitter weather. The transformation was
-in the nature of a miracle. Soft breezes blew up from the
-valleys, warm winds which settled the snow and filled it
-with water. Midnight smelled the earthiness of the wind
-from the lowlands and pranced eagerly. A change as sudden
-as the change in the weather had come over him.
-For months he had given all his attention to the gnawing
-hunger which was always demanding more dry grass;
-now he was stirred by another urge. He wanted to be free
-to run, to seek something he did not understand.</p>
-
-<p>Shaking his head he galloped through the slush and
-mud to the ledge trail. The dirty ice filling the crevice
-had not settled. The force of the slide had packed it so
-hard that it melted only a little on the surface. Midnight
-walked across the fissure and up the ledge trail. He stood
-on the edge of the meadow and looked across its gleaming
-surface. With an eager nicker he plowed through the
-wet snow. The old timber-line buck was not there to greet
-him and the only answer to his call was the harsh and
-irritated chatter of a crested jay in the timber.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight moved out on the mesa and began pawing
-for grass. He was hungry and now that he was in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-open he did not know what he desired or where he
-wanted to go, so he set to feeding. After a time he moved
-down beside the castle rocks and stood staring into the
-smoky haze of the valley country.</p>
-
-<p>Toward evening he went to the castle rocks and
-climbed up to the shelter he had shared with Lady
-Ebony. He sniffed about, pawing and snorting as he
-smelled cougar scent. The cat smell mingled with the
-pungent odor coming from the pack rat’s nest in the corner.
-The cat smell was cold but it stirred him to uneasy
-anger. He tore to bits the bed of sticks where the king
-cat had slept, scattering them about on the rocky floor.</p>
-
-<p>That night the cold came again and the slushy snow
-froze into a coating of ice. In the morning the meadow
-was locked under a thick rust of icy armor and Midnight
-was forced to work hard to get a meal. For several weeks
-he battled to keep his stomach filled. But with the passing
-of each day the air grew warmer and softer, the snow
-settled, and bare spots began to appear. Midnight was
-able again to eat his fill. He raced around the meadow
-giving play to his powerful muscles. He was big and
-strong; another season would see him a magnificent black
-stallion.</p>
-
-<p>As the snow line crept back into the timber to make its
-last stand in the shadows under the spruce, the buds on
-the trees burst and the first flowers shoved their heads out
-of the ground. Green shoots pushed up through the dead
-grass. Their lush juices tantalized the black horse. He
-could not get enough of them, yet he could not let them
-alone. His efforts always ended by his eating a great deal
-of the cured grass in order to fill his belly.</p>
-
-<p>The bears came ambling across the meadow in pairs
-and singly to slide down the leaning spruce for their
-spring meeting before the flowering of their love moon.
-The wolves ran under the spring stars or howled on barren<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-ridges. Midnight did not pay much attention to the
-gray killers. He had come to know by their howls when
-they were hunting and when they were serenading. The
-old tom cougars stalked through the timber while the she-cats
-sought them out, which is the way of the big cats.
-And the little folk left their winter dens to race about in
-the warm sunshine. The yellowbelly whistlers blasted
-their shrill warning from the sentinel stone while the
-calico chips and the rockchips stayed within the protected
-area where they could pay attention to the warnings
-given by the whistlers. The hawks circled in the blue
-above, billowing with the gusts of spring wind, while the
-eagles circled high above them in the still upper air. One
-day the chipmunks came out and the meadow rang with
-their chock-chock song as they celebrated their awakening.</p>
-
-<p>In all this celebrating and excitement the cabin at the
-edge of the meadow stood silent and disconsolate, dead
-and lifeless. It seemed older and more weathered than
-before. The weeds on its dirt roof did not break into
-green foliage as soon as those in the meadow. One of the
-eaves boards had given way, letting the dirt covering slip
-from a corner of the roof and exposing the split slabs beneath.
-The spring showers made little gullies and seams
-which looked like wrinkles. At the door the willow chair
-lay on its side, tipped over by the snow or some inquisitive
-visitor who recognized that the man smell was long
-cold and dead.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight visited the cabin often, smelling about. He
-used its rough log corners as a scratching post against
-which he leaned and rubbed while he grunted with pleasure.
-The rubbing loosened mats of hair from his sides
-and soon his coat was sleek and shining, new as the blue
-flowers crowding the shady spots at the edge of the timber.
-As spring advanced Midnight became more nervous.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-He ran more often and for longer at a time, sometimes
-circling the meadow several times before halting to paw
-restlessly. He did not leave the meadow but he was always
-listening and often paused to call shrilly.</p>
-
-<p>Down on the desert the chestnut stallion and his band
-had met with an ordeal unusual for them. There had
-been only light snows all winter and the spring rains had
-been so light they did not settle the dust or harden the
-sand. The grass was short and poor in quality. The big
-stallion had trouble forcing the mares to do as he wished.
-The wise old ones knew that there was grass and water
-in the mountains and were determined to head that way.
-Finally the chestnut gave in and led them toward the
-Crazy Kill Range. They worked their way quickly
-through the foothills where cowboys were shoving white-faced
-cattle out on the spring range. The mares would
-gladly have stayed to feed and put some fat on their lank
-frames in the low country where the grass was growing
-lustily, but the chestnut drove them higher, toward the
-bleak meadows under timber line where the riders would
-not come.</p>
-
-<p>One morning the band arrived at the high mesa overlooking
-Shadow Canyon. The mares and colts came up
-the narrow trail first, with the chestnut bringing up the
-rear. When they broke from the canyon they spread out
-and began feeding. The pinto filly was the second one to
-reach the mesa. She was stronger and tougher than any of
-the other mares and had stood the winter better.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight was resting in the timber close above the
-clearing by the cabin when the pinto and her mother
-walked out into the tall grass. He plunged to his feet and
-whinnied loudly. The mare halted and looked at him
-without answering his call, but the pinto tossed her head
-and nickered eagerly. With a flash of her heels she trotted
-to meet him. Midnight charged across the grass and slid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-to a halt beside her. The pinto pivoted and lashed out at
-him with her trim heels. Midnight dodged and the filly
-headed across the meadow with the black swinging along
-at her side. They raced the full length of the mesa and
-back again, to halt at the base of the castle rocks where
-they stood, snorting and prancing.</p>
-
-<p>Their second run took them charging through the band
-of mares spread out on the meadow. The scrawny colts in
-the band bounced after the fleeting racers until they were
-outdistanced while the mares watched without interest.
-Just at that moment they were far too busy pulling grass
-to care about this black stallion.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut trotted out on the meadow and stood
-looking about for danger signs. He sighted the black and
-the pinto racing across the grass and his eyes rolled, his
-ears flattened, and he blasted a savage challenge.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight and the pinto whirled and were standing on
-high ground at the upper end of the mesa. The pinto
-tossed her head and leaped away toward the mares as
-she saw the lord of the herd charging toward her. Midnight
-sent his own challenge ringing across the meadow
-as he leaped to meet the big stallion. His feelings were
-much different than they had been at their first meeting.
-Now he was eager to accept the challenge to battle, and
-savage rage, as great as the rage of the chestnut, filled
-him. He had his father’s fighting blood in his veins.</p>
-
-<p>The two stallions crashed together and the greater
-weight and power of the chestnut sent Midnight staggering
-back. He was not yet so rugged and heavy as his
-father. He recovered his balance and reared with teeth
-bared and hoofs pounding. The master of the band raised
-his massive hoofs and struck back as he reached for Midnight’s
-neck with his teeth. The two stood like boxers,
-hammering away at each other. Again Midnight was
-pounded back.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The chestnut had only one idea in his head and that
-was to smash this black stallion who had dared challenge
-his mastery. It would not have mattered had he known
-that Midnight was his son. He was sure he would soon
-end the career of the black; he knew his advantage and
-rushed upon the colt with savage eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight met the next charge and was hammered back
-once more, giving ground slowly as the heavy hoofs
-pounded him and the bared teeth ripped tufts of hair
-from his shoulders and neck. Slowly the chestnut pushed
-him toward the rim of the canyon. But Midnight refused
-to turn tail and run. This time he had a different urge to
-keep him fighting. He was not a lonesome colt seeking
-companionship, he was a stallion desiring the rightful
-place of a leader. He could easily have outdistanced the
-chestnut had he chosen to flee, but he was filled with hot
-rage. He had a wild desire to kill the big stallion who was
-battering him. Slowly he gave ground, moving down the
-gentle slope of the mesa toward the rocky edge of the
-canyon. Behind him the walls of Shadow Canyon
-dropped away in a sheer face a hundred feet in height.
-There was no brush-padded ledge close under the rim at
-that point, but the black paid no attention to the danger.</p>
-
-<p>Foot by foot the two moved down the slope. Blood
-spurted from wounds on shoulders and necks. The smell
-of it increased the fury of the battling stallions. Their
-savage screams rang through the spruce timber and
-echoed back from the walls of the castle rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The chestnut reared and plunged, eager to smash his
-antagonist to the ground. Midnight met the smashing
-charge with counterblows, but he was driven backward
-though he remained on his feet. A red wound gaped on
-his chest and blood trickled down across the white splash
-on his forehead but his fury was so great that he did not
-feel the pain. His hind feet struck solid rock and stones<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-flew into the canyon behind him. He was poised on the
-very edge of the chasm. Then he saw his danger, as he
-shifted sidewise to dodge the blows of the big stallion.
-His hind feet were planted inches from the rim as he
-reared to meet another attack. The chestnut was blind
-with fury, he did not see the sheer drop ahead. With a
-terrible scream he lunged.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had met every charge squarely, desiring only
-to match blows with his foe, but the dizzy space under
-his feet made him suddenly change his tactics. He leaped
-aside to avoid being shoved over the edge. The chestnut’s
-lunge carried him forward like an avalanche. Too late he
-saw the rim and the empty space ahead. Plunging and
-sliding he shot toward the abyss. Midnight’s rump was
-toward him and close. With a shrill cry the black lashed
-out with his hind feet. His hoofs landed against the side
-of the struggling stallion poised on the dizzy height. The
-chestnut might have saved himself but for that hail of
-blows. With a defiant, savage squeal he plunged into
-space.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight whirled about and stood with lowered head,
-hot breath whistling through his flaring nostrils, his eyes
-rolling so that their white rims gleamed in the morning
-sunlight. He watched the body of the chestnut turn over
-and over in the air as it shot down to land in a mangled
-heap on a pile of rocks. Stamping and snorting he waited
-for the chestnut to get to his feet and start back to finish
-the battle. The chestnut did not move, but lay, a mangled
-heap of broken bones and twisted muscles at the foot of
-the cliff. Midnight challenged his adversary many times
-as he stood there on the high rim. When he got no reply
-he turned toward the mares who had not stopped their
-eager feeding. The pinto nickered eagerly and left her
-grass pulling to trot toward him. The mares lifted their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-heads for a moment as he came closer. Midnight trotted
-to them, dancing as he approached.</p>
-
-<p>With the pinto beside him he raced once around the
-meadow, then the two joined the mares. Midnight was
-too excited to start feeding. He walked around sniffing at
-the colts, edging up to the mares. The old ones laid back
-their ears and warned him to keep his distance. When he
-tried to nose one of their colts they humped their backs
-warningly. But they accepted him as the master of the
-band and waited for him to assert himself in the savage
-and harsh manner to which they were accustomed. But
-Midnight lacked much in leadership. He really wanted
-to be a member of the band and not a leader. He wanted
-to play with the pinto filly. His rage had cooled and with
-it had gone much of the strange power he had felt while
-battling the chestnut stallion. The pinto did not understand
-why she was interested in Midnight but she stayed
-close to his side and divided her attention between him
-and the lush grass.</p>
-
-<p>Toward evening the mares became restless. They were
-used to seeking cover before night fell. One old mare
-moved away from the band. She had decided that this
-new leader was not going to seek a safe retreat. She shook
-her head, then moved into the timber. The others followed
-her with Midnight and the pinto coming along behind,
-nipping at each other and making a great show of
-kicking their heels and lashing at each other. And the old
-mare changed the course the chestnut had so insistently
-followed. She headed across the ridge and down into a
-deep valley.</p>
-
-<p>The mares followed their new leader. They expected
-the chestnut stallion to come charging through the woods
-after them to drive them back toward the high ridges, but
-they did not want to go higher and did not intend to head
-that way until he came.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The moon swung up over a spruce ridge and flooded
-the valley with white light. The wise old mare selected a
-sheltered little meadow for a stopping place. It was small
-and the band of thirty horses had to crowd close together,
-but it smallness offered protection against cougars and
-wolves. The cunning and harsh leadership of the chestnut
-stallion had taken much of the natural wariness away
-from the mares. They had always depended on him to
-guide them.</p>
-
-<p>Late that night Midnight had his first chance to take
-his place as protector and lord of the band. The mares
-and the colts had bedded down. Midnight and the pinto
-had raced around the clearing and come to a halt on a
-wooded knoll overlooking the meadow. They stood close
-together, snorting and pawing and playing. They pretended
-to see forms in the black shadows under the
-spruce. While they were standing there a lank cougar
-passed below the high point. His nose wrinkled and his
-long, black-tipped tail lashed as he scented the mares and
-colts sleeping in the open.</p>
-
-<p>Circling to windward the yellow killer crept to the
-edge of the meadow. He was looking for the sentinel he
-expected to find on guard over the band. When he saw
-no guard he snarled softly and his yellow eyes flamed. He
-peered intently at the bedded horses and his eyes fastened
-on a colt standing close to his mother who was lying in a
-deep hollow. The colt’s head was down and his furry
-rump was toward the king cat.</p>
-
-<p>Silently, like a tawny shadow, the cat slid through the
-grass toward the unsuspecting colt. When he was within
-striking distance he drew his powerful legs under him
-and flattened his head between his massive forepaws. His
-long claws moved slowly in and out, sheathing and unsheathing
-their sharp points; his lips pulled away from
-his fangs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Up on the knoll Midnight was dancing on his hind legs,
-his ears back, his bared teeth reaching to nip at the neck
-of the pinto. She whirled and lashed out at him with her
-slender feet. Midnight dodged the blows and crowded
-against her, shoving her roughly to one side. She laid back
-her ears and sunk her teeth into the loose skin of his
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>The pain angered Midnight and he whirled to teach
-her a lesson. His lunge was halted as the savage scream
-of the cougar cracked the stillness. His forefeet struck the
-ground with a thud and he stood beside the pinto, staring
-toward the mares. The frightened whinny of a colt mingled
-with the cry of the big cat. That cry from the stricken
-colt sent a surging rush of rage through Midnight. He
-plunged straight down the slope toward the spot where
-the cat had made his attack. In the meadow the mares
-had lurched to their feet and were snorting and milling
-about. With a ringing call the black stallion charged to
-the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>The cougar had landed on the colt’s back, striking him
-down instantly. The little fellow was dead in a moment.
-Standing on the limp body of his victim, the yellow killer
-faced the angry mares who plunged around him. Midnight
-charged through the circle and leaped at the killer,
-his ears laid back, his battle cry ringing. This was something
-the cougar had not expected. He had decided there
-was no stallion with the band. Now he arched his back
-and reared to meet Midnight. He lashed out at the black
-as he came in.</p>
-
-<p>The cougar stayed a minute too long in facing the enraged
-Midnight. He expected the stallion to swerve and
-rush past, but Midnight did not swerve. He lifted his forefeet
-and struck straight into the face of the killer. His
-smashing hoofs descended on the head and shoulders of
-the king cat. The blows sent the cat rolling and tumbling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-over and over on the grass. Instantly the mares joined the
-attack. Once a leader had braved the terrible fangs and
-claws of the cat they were ready to finish the job.</p>
-
-<p>Screaming and rolling, the cougar tried to escape, to
-get to his feet and leap clear of the smashing hoofs, but
-the hoofs beat him down and trampled him. Teeth tore
-at him as he twisted and lashed. His claws and teeth were
-poor protection against the sharp hoofs of the horses. He
-was battered back on the grass each time he tried to get
-his feet under him. In a minute’s time he was a bloody
-pulp and the mares had backed away. They stood in a
-circle around him, their nostrils flaring, their eyes rolling.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight danced about snorting and blowing excitedly.
-He was aware again of his power and was beginning
-to understand the job he had taken over from the chestnut.
-The mares stood waiting for him to decide what
-should be done. When he did not offer to lead them away
-from the scene of the kill an old mare struck out and the
-others followed except the mother whose colt was dead.
-She stood over him nickering and calling, trying to get
-him to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>The pinto went with the mares. She had been badly
-frightened by the attack and wanted to stay close beside
-her mother. Midnight trotted after the band and stood by
-while they bedded down in another meadow near the
-scene of the attack. He walked around sniffing and snorting,
-expecting another cougar to come out of the night.
-When nothing happened, he lay down for a few hours’
-rest just before dawn. One of the old mares at once got
-up and set to feeding apart from the herd. She seemed to
-sense that Midnight had much to learn about leadership.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the band fed in the meadow until the old
-mare decided they should move on. Midnight did not
-offer to lead them, so she struck out. They headed deeper
-into the lush grass country. They passed many white-faced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-cows and yearling steers. Occasionally a lordly bull
-would saunter out of the shade to watch them. The band
-had invaded Major Howard’s finest grass belt. They did
-not know the danger this would bring, all they thought of
-was the fine grass and the plentiful supply of water in the
-clear, rushing streams. There was aspen shade for the
-middle of the day and there was spruce timber for shelter
-from the sudden and violent thunderstorms with their
-cold rain.</p>
-
-<p>The band soon forgot the chestnut stallion. Midnight
-was an easy master. He let them wander where they
-wished. But he was a fierce and terrible fighter when
-roused. They accepted him without much concern, giving
-way to his few demands.</p>
-
-<p>The thunderstorms seldom lasted over half an hour and
-the spruce needles shed the rain. Midnight was happy in
-the easy life. The pinto played with him, racing over the
-grass in the mornings or at dusk. She did what he demanded
-without making any demands of her own. And
-now Midnight had begun to watch for enemies while the
-herd fed. He was slowly learning what was expected of
-him.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xii" id="xii"></a>12. Doom of the Band</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Tex</span> dropped the saddle he was dragging across the yard.
-He faced Major Howard, his lean face expressionless.
-The major was out of sorts that morning and when he
-was in such a mood he was short-spoken. In his irritation
-he did not notice that Tex was not in a jovial frame of
-mind either.</p>
-
-<p>“The boys tell me there’s a band of thirty wild horses
-down on the aspen range. I want you to take a crew up
-there and clean them out.” He added as an after-thought,
-“Use rifles and make sure none of them get away.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex scowled. He was dead set against shooting any
-sort of horse, even a scrub.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not round ’em up and sell ’em?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>The major grunted disgustedly. He could never understand
-the quirks in the nature of his range boss. Tex
-knew the wild horses were worthless on the market.
-They would be tough and mean to handle, half of them
-never could be broken, and they would not bring ten
-dollars a head. To the major this was a simple matter of
-business. Tex did not object to raising fine cattle for
-slaughtering, therefore he should not object to killing a
-few head of worthless horses. The major spoke impatiently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You know it would cost more to corral and handle
-that bunch than we could get out of them,” he snapped.
-“Kill them all. While I had more open range than I
-could use I wasn’t so particular, but I’ve just bought
-two big herds of whitefaces. It will take every foot of
-grass I own to run them.” The major noticed that Tex
-was not convinced. He added more quietly, “This is
-business, big business.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon so,” Tex answered as he reached down and
-caught the horn of his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>The major was ruffled by Tex’s reply.</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t want to handle this job I’ll get another
-man to take charge of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll handle it,” Tex said grimly. Then he added almost
-to himself, “I thought that chestnut stud was the smartest
-hoss on the range. Never figured he’d trail his herd down
-into cow country where the boys ride regular.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he has and I want that scrub stuff killed,” the
-major answered.</p>
-
-<p>Tex dragged his saddle into the corral and whistled to
-his bay gelding. The bay trotted to meet him and Tex let
-his mouth relax into a grin as he patted the big fellow’s
-neck.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon we’ll have to do the dirty work,” he said
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>Tex picked four men to go with him, men who could
-handle saddle carbines expertly. He did not want any
-careless shooting. The kills would have to be clean. When
-he explained the major’s orders to the men they growled
-but none of them refused to go. They all shared Tex’s dislike
-for the job, but they would carry out the boss’s orders.</p>
-
-<p>The execution crew rode away from the ranch with
-thirty-thirty rifles slapping under their stirrup flaps. The
-boys who had reported to the major had given the location<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-of the herd. Tex did not expect to find the band
-where the boys had seen them, but by riding to that
-meadow they could pick up the trail. Thirty horses would
-leave plenty of tracks.</p>
-
-<p>Tex speculated gloomily on the foolish turn the habits
-of the wild band had taken. The big stallion at their head
-must have lost his cunning or else he had met with disaster
-and a younger leader had taken his place.</p>
-
-<p>Silently the men rode through the timber and up the
-long ridges leading out of the lower valley. They entered
-the aspen belt and took a trail which ran along
-the top of a rocky ridge. From that ridge they crossed
-over to another and finally followed a red-granite cliff
-wall which led them into a narrow meadow. Towering
-rims of granite formed a half circle around the meadow
-with scattered spruce close to the wall on the lower side
-where the meadow broke off into the lower country. The
-entrance to the narrow valley was grown over by a
-stand of young aspen trees. Tex hoped to pick up the
-trail of the herd in this meadow and follow it from there.
-He halted his men in the dense cover and scowled across
-the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>At the upper end fed the band of wild horses he
-sought. They had not moved their feed ground since the
-boys had first located them. Tex was disgusted with
-them; they were acting like brood mares in a farm pasture.</p>
-
-<p>“The chestnut stud isn’t running that bunch,” he said
-gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>The men nodded agreement and Shorty Spears, horse-breaker
-for the ranch, spoke up.</p>
-
-<p>“Must be an old mare at the head of that herd. This
-is just the spot an old biddie would pick, grass knee-high,
-water close in.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Tex nodded. He was studying the band carefully.
-Finally he gave his orders.</p>
-
-<p>“Two of you take the upper side along the wall. Keep
-in the brush cover until you work your way down close
-to them. Make clean jobs, no gut shooting or broken legs.
-Shorty, you and Cal take the lower side along the rim.
-They won’t break down over that wall. I’ll wait here in
-the outlet and pick off any that break past you boys.
-They have to come out this way. Now get going.”</p>
-
-<p>The men divided forces and rode away. They were
-eager to get a bad job done. It would be no sport for
-them, shooting down a band of mares and colts. The
-horses were trapped and would be helpless before the
-repeating rifles. Tex watched them go. He noted grimly
-that even the wind was against the wild horses. They had
-no sentinel posted and Tex could spot no stallion among
-them. The execution should be quick and complete.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight fed beside the pinto filly. They had just
-finished a race around the meadow and were standing
-in a clump of young spruce and balsam looking down
-over the lower valleys. The rim at their feet broke off
-steeply. It was matted with brush; ragged rocks jutted
-up through the green leaves. The black stallion was
-nervous and uneasy, though he did not know why. He
-had a feeling of confinement, similar to that he had felt
-while he was a prisoner on the meadow below the high
-mesa. He tossed his head and pawed, snorting impatiently.
-He was making ready to drive the band out of
-the closed meadow.</p>
-
-<p>With a sharp nicker he whirled and laid his ears back.
-The pinto edged away from him. With mane flaring and
-tail flowing around her heels she kicked high into the air
-and dashed away toward the mares. Midnight charged
-after her, sending his warning call ringing across the
-meadow. The mares jerked up their heads and stared at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-him, then looked around uneasily to see what had startled
-him. When they saw nothing they fell to feeding again.
-They had no intention of leaving this horse heaven until
-they were driven out, and their experience with Midnight
-did not make them leap into action the way a command
-from the chestnut would have acted on them. This
-meadow was a safe retreat from cougars and wolves. No
-killer could slip up on them with the steep rim on one
-side and the high walls on the other.</p>
-
-<p>Reaching the first mare, Midnight rushed at her, and
-when she did not leap away he fastened his bare teeth
-on her rump. The mare squealed in pain and surprise.
-Humping her back and bucking up and down she fled
-before his lashing attack. Midnight rushed at another and
-sent her staggering as his powerful chest smashed into
-her. It had taken him days to get worked up to this nervous
-and panicky pitch, but he was roused now and meant
-to drive the band out of the meadow.</p>
-
-<p>He was swinging around the band, slashing at the
-mares with his teeth or crashing into them to get them to
-hurry when the silence of the valley was shattered by two
-crashing reports from near the base of the cliff. An old
-mare near Midnight staggered, turned halfway around,
-then sank to the grass without making a sound. Another
-mare plunged into the air and slid on her side until she
-came to rest in a grassy hollow, her legs beating the air
-in jerky spasms. The two shots did more to snap life and
-action into the band than Midnight had been able to accomplish.
-The mares charged wildly toward the aspen
-grove which marked the outlet to the trap. Mothers
-crowded colts along as fast as the little ones could run.
-The spitting and crashing of rifles echoed along the canyon
-wall and mares plunged into the grass mortally
-wounded at every leap the band took. A cloud of dust
-rolled up behind the charging band and in that cloud of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-dust Midnight ripped and lashed as he drove the wild
-ones on.</p>
-
-<p>The pinto filly had rushed to her mother when the first
-two shots rang out. Together they were leading the
-flight. Suddenly the mother swerved and staggered,
-plunged down into the grass. The pinto planted her feet
-and halted. Her sudden checking of speed saved her
-from a bullet which had been aimed to break her neck.
-The lead burned across her forehead raising a red welt.
-The little mare whirled and plunged back into the mass
-of plunging horses. She found Midnight savagely working
-to force the pace, and crowded close to him.</p>
-
-<p>The charging rush of the mares was checked and they
-swerved in bewildered fashion as a new burst of flame
-and death leaped at them from a scrub-oak clump on
-the edge of the rim well down toward the aspen grove.
-Mares collapsed and colts leaped and ran about wildly.
-Midnight had only one thought, to drive the mares out
-through the aspen grove and into the open country. This
-was his first meeting with the deadly guns of man and,
-like all wild things, the death which struck from far off
-filled him with terror. But he did not desert the mares. A
-great rage possessed him and almost crowded out the
-terror. Screaming and biting he worried the flanks of the
-rapidly thinning band.</p>
-
-<p>Death held the little meadow in its bloody grip. The
-grass was marked by twisted bodies. But Midnight knew
-there was one avenue of escape. When the mares hesitated
-before the guns of Shorty and Cal he attacked
-their flanks with fury and drove them on. This was not
-just the way Tex had planned it. He had figured that the
-fire from the oaks would make the band circle back
-around the meadow, giving his men at the lower end a
-second chance to kill. He had been sure the band would
-mill around and around the mesa until all were shot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-down. Now he sat in his saddle waiting grimly. It looked
-as though he would have to turn them.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had driven the mares into full gallop again.
-Many went down as they swept close to the oak clump
-where the two men were hidden, but they charged
-straight past. Suddenly the vicious crack of a rifle broke
-from the edge of the aspens. Tex had opened fire, his carbine
-working with speed and murderous accuracy. In the
-hail of lead mares went down, bucking and twisting. The
-attack was too much for the remnant of the band. They
-dodged and tried to double back. Midnight reared and
-plunged at them, screaming madly. The bewildered and
-panic-stricken animals turned toward the rim and the
-black stallion sent them plunging toward it. When they
-would have halted at the dizzy drop, with its matted and
-ragged rocks, he lashed them on over the edge. They
-tumbled downward, plunging, rolling, sliding, and twisting.
-One mare went down with a broken leg, another
-struck a jagged pinnacle of rock and rolled over. Behind
-them Midnight and the pinto took the leap as they came
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>Tex lowered his rifle. His eyes were on the black stallion
-and there was an excited gleam in them. He had
-never seen such a magnificent beast or such a feat of
-reckless daring. But all these feelings were over-shadowed
-by something else. He was looking at the long legs,
-the powerful chest, and the slender body of the stallion.
-He was sure he knew the sire and the dam who had
-brought him into the world. Here was the son of the
-chestnut stallion and Lady Ebony! He wet his lips and
-then grinned eagerly. He did not give the escape of a
-small part of the herd any thought. His mind was making
-plans, leaping ahead to what he would tell Major Howard.
-He was remembering the voice of Sam saying that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-Lady Ebony would come back to the high country. He
-was roused by Shorty’s amused voice.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s eatin’ you? You look like you was seein’ angels
-or somethin’. Me, I’m plumb sick to my stummick.”
-Shorty moved over to where he could see the trail
-the band had made in escaping. He bent forward and
-stared at it. “You don’t mean to say some of ’em went
-over the side here?”</p>
-
-<p>Tex nodded, reloaded his carbine, and made ready to
-end the misery of the mare who had broken her leg.</p>
-
-<p>“How many got away?” Shorty asked. He had a sudden
-suspicion that Tex had not taken full advantage of
-his chance to clean out the band. Certainly the slope
-where the wild ones had plunged down to safety was
-open and within easy range of the spot where Tex was
-planted.</p>
-
-<p>“Ten head and a stud,” Tex said and spoke as though
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Must have been a fire-eater of a stud to force them
-mares down over a cliff like that,” Shorty said with a
-quick grin.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a fire-eater,” Tex agreed softly.</p>
-
-<p>The other boys had ridden up and were looking at the
-trail. Cal spoke in his slow drawl.</p>
-
-<p>“I passed up one shot an’ you can report it to the major
-if you want. I had a broadside at a black stud but jest
-couldn’t find my sights for watchin’ him tear into those
-mares.”</p>
-
-<p>“That stud learned something here today that he won’t
-forget,” Tex said grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet a month’s pay we don’t ever catch that bunch
-in a place like this again,” Shorty said.</p>
-
-<p>The others grinned. They knew the stallion would be
-wiser and more wary now that he had met the guns of
-men. They were not sorry he had got away. Any horse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-that would lead a crazy charge down the face of a brush-matted
-cliff deserved a break and was no scrub. One of
-the others said:</p>
-
-<p>“I caught a glimpse of him through the dust. He’d
-make any of the major’s blooded stuff look like a broom
-tail if they were stood up side by side. Can’t figure where
-such a hoss could have come from, must be a freak.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex grinned but said nothing. He knew where the big
-black came from. As he moved away he remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he might have some good blood in him.”</p>
-
-<p>A plan was forming in the mind of the range boss
-and he was eager to work it out. He wanted to be alone
-so that he could get it all ready. He turned to his men.</p>
-
-<p>“You boys ride on down to the ranch and report to the
-boss. Tell him I’m staying on the trail of the ones that
-got away. I’ll be in late tonight.”</p>
-
-<p>Shorty grinned. “Figure you might be lucky enough to
-dab a rope on that black?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d trade every horse in my string but the bay for
-him,” Tex admitted.</p>
-
-<p>Shorty laughed. He had missed the real significance
-of the remark. He thought Tex wanted the black as a
-saddler. Tex was a nut when it came to saddle stock. He
-remarked in an amused voice:</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll be a case of sneaking and trailing from now on,
-and when you do dab a rope on him you’d best have
-some help handy. That baby bites and kicks like a
-cougar.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex nodded full agreement as he rode away from the
-men. He took the regular trail off the mesa and rode
-around to the foot of the cliff. He had no desire to send
-the bay down over the trail the black had made for the
-mares. At the bottom of the cliff he picked up the trail
-and followed it. He did not have to dismount to tell the
-tracks of the stallion and those of the mares. The tracks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-of the leader were clean and deep, with perfect alignment.
-The trail led up the mountain in an almost straight
-line and the horses did not halt until they reached the
-barrens high under the rims of the Crazy Kill peaks.</p>
-
-<p>As he rode along Tex planned his course of action. He
-would ambush the black and drop a rope on him. Taking
-him now would be possible, Tex figured, because the
-black was still a colt and could be handled if properly
-worked. If he stayed in the wild another year he might
-develop into a horse that could never be broken. He was
-just learning the tricks of leadership; that was shown by
-the trap the mares had walked into. Tex grinned eagerly
-as he planned. He was sure he could convince the major,
-once he looked at the midnight black, that his theory
-about Lady Ebony was correct.</p>
-
-<p>He was also sure that, once convinced that Sam had
-not stolen the mare, the major would get the old man
-out of the pen quickly. Major Howard was an influential
-man and a determined one when he set out to do anything.
-He was a shrewd judge of blooded horses, and that
-would help.</p>
-
-<p>Tex was eager to capture the black at once. He had a
-feeling that if Sam was ever to come back to his high
-mesa he would have to be set free that summer. He had
-talked to the warden and to the doctor at the prison and
-both agreed with him. It was Tex’s way never to consider
-failure. The bay he rode was the fastest horse on
-the range and Tex had accumulated some money and a
-great many possessions betting on his speed. He was at
-his best in rough country where sure-footed accuracy
-counted for more than speed, and he was powerful
-enough to handle the black once Tex roped him. The
-bay could lay a five-year-old maverick on his side without
-budging when the bulk of the critter hit the rope.</p>
-
-<p>Tex halted behind a clump of bushes on a ridge and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span>
-sat looking up a long, narrow valley. His keen eyes
-lighted up with excitement as they rested on a small band
-of horses feeding close to the timbered edge of the valley.
-He spotted the black stallion with a pinto filly feeding
-beside him. Deliberately Tex studied the ground and
-laid plans. It would take most of an hour to circle the
-band so as to have the timber as a screen for his approach
-and the wind right. And his plan called for sending
-them back into the lower country instead of higher
-into the barrens where trailing would be tough. He was
-sure the band would feed for at least an hour. The mares
-were fagged and hungry, he could see that, even at a
-great distance. Heading the bay up a narrow ledge, he
-climbed to the top of the rim overlooking the valley
-and dropped down on the far slope.</p>
-
-<p>The pace Midnight had set in driving the mares into
-the high barrens had taxed their strength. They had
-finally refused to go any further and he had let them
-pause to feed and rest. But he was nervous and kept
-moving about, jerking his head high, sniffing and snorting.
-The excitement of the battle on the mesa below was
-still in him. He lacked the experience of the chestnut stallion
-and he did not know the country into which he was
-headed. Instinct had made him strike for the barrens, but
-he did not know where to go now that he had reached
-the rough country. So he let the mares feed while he
-moved about pulling a mouthful of grass here and there.
-The pinto stayed close by him as though sure he would
-protect her from all danger.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight fed above the mares and close to the narrow
-trail leading up to a saddle on the ridge above. The
-meadow was really a bench with a rock wall on one side
-and a slope on the other. It lay along the edge of a deep
-canyon but it was not a trap as the little meadow had
-been; it was wide open at both ends and timber grew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-close, affording shelter which could be reached in a few
-seconds. Midnight watched the trail above and the meadow
-below, he tested the air, and he listened.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he stiffened, his nostrils flaring as he listened
-intently. The sound of a loosened stone had come to
-him. The pinto sensed something and edged close to his
-side. Midnight snorted warningly and the mares instantly
-lifted their heads, ready to leap to cover.</p>
-
-<p>Then Midnight saw a rider come charging out of the
-timber above him. The man was mounted on a bay gelding
-and he was standing up in his stirrups whirling a
-rope around his head. The bay was reaching out with
-powerful strides which carried him over the rough
-ground at terrific speed. Midnight shrilled a warning to
-the mares. The pinto froze into terrified stillness. She did
-not run but stood rooted beside Midnight, staring at the
-oncoming rider. Midnight expected the roar of guns but
-no explosions came. He was sure other men were hidden
-below to cut off any retreat. But he was on the wrong
-side of the band of mares to drive them upward. He did
-what the charging cowboy least expected, something the
-chestnut stallion never would have done. He laid back his
-ears, bared his teeth and charged straight at the bay,
-screaming his challenge as he leaped forward.</p>
-
-<p>Tex was startled by the action. He gave the bay his
-head so the big horse could save himself. The bay
-swerved, dodging aside as he would have dodged the
-charge of an infuriated bull. The loop Tex was swinging
-sagged and jerked into a useless snarl as the bay lunged
-aside. Midnight plunged in and reared, lashing out with
-his hoofs, reached for the bay with his teeth. His pounding
-hoofs missed the saddler but his teeth nipped a gash
-in the horse’s flank. The bay was a high-spirited, nervous
-beast. He plunged and ducked his head. Grunting and
-snorting he started to pitch. Tex had to ride as he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-never ridden before to control his mount. He saw Midnight
-whirl past, then wheel to charge again&mdash;the black
-stallion had gone stark mad. His hand dropped to the
-butt of his forty-five. He might have to shoot the big fellow
-to save himself. He jerked out his gun and fired
-twice into the air over Midnight’s head.</p>
-
-<p>The crashing reports jarred some of the rage out of
-the black stallion. He pivoted rapidly. In that moment
-Tex got the bay under control and jerked in his rope.
-The shot had helped quiet the saddler. With the pinto at
-his side Midnight broke for the trail leading upward.</p>
-
-<p>Tex set his spurs and sent the bay thundering after
-the black stallion. This was just what he wanted. He
-worked desperately to swing out a loop. The black had
-a hundred yards of go in the open the way he was headed.
-With the big colt running away Tex could drop a
-rope on him and pull him down. He raised himself in
-the stirrups and swung out his loop. Then Tex’s eager
-grin vanished. The black stallion was running away from
-his bay! He was leaving the fast saddler behind in a way
-that made the saddler seem slow. Tex overhauled the
-pinto and passed her. She was running her best, with
-neck stretched out and mane flowing, heading upward in
-an attempt to follow the black.</p>
-
-<p>Tex held on until the black stallion thundered out into
-the saddle above and vanished down the far slope. He
-had not used his spurs on the bay. He knew his horse
-had given everything he had. On the ridge Tex pulled
-up while the bay blew and pawed. Suddenly Tex
-laughed. He had never seen such speed. Now he was
-certain he had to capture the big fellow. He just couldn’t
-have a horse on the range that was faster than the one
-he owned. Then his laugh died away. He had a more important
-reason for catching the black; in the excitement
-he had forgotten it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Midnight charged through the timber and kept going
-until he reached the bottom of a canyon. He halted in a
-dense growth of river alder and called long and loud
-to the pinto. From far up the mountainside she answered
-him. Her call was frantic and excited. Midnight listened
-and heard a shout from the man who had chased him.
-He kept still for a long time. Finally he called to the
-pinto again and she answered him from lower down the
-slope. She was hurrying to him as fast as she could make
-her way down the rough slope. Midnight waited and listened.
-After a time he decided the bay and his rider were
-not coming down into the canyon. He could hear the
-pinto rattling stones and nickering eagerly but there was
-no other sound.</p>
-
-<p>The pinto broke into the alder stand in answer to Midnight’s
-call as she reached the bottom of the canyon.
-They stood close together, watching and listening.</p>
-
-<p>Up on the ridge Tex turned the bay and headed him
-back down to the long meadow. Night would soon settle
-and he would have no chance to trail the black after
-dark. His best course was to follow the mares and drive
-them into the lower country so that the black stallion
-would have to come down to round them up. He sent the
-bay galloping along the trail the fleeing mares had made
-as they raced off the bench.</p>
-
-<p>Deep in the canyon Midnight was undecided what he
-should do. He was certain he could not stay where he
-was. The man would be sure to follow them. He finally
-followed his instinct, which was to put many miles between
-himself and the country which had proved so dangerous.
-He did not have a strong urge to follow the mares
-and round them up. His instincts for leadership were not
-strong enough to make him look for them. He knew
-of only one place where he had always found safety
-and where he had never been attacked. That place was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-the little meadow under the rim below the high mesa.
-With a snort he headed up the sloping side of the canyon.</p>
-
-<p>The high mesa was far across the mountain on the
-southern edge of Major Howard’s range lands. The old
-mares had led the band along the backbone of the continental
-divide and down into the lower valleys. Midnight’s
-wild instinct led him unerringly toward the place
-of his birth and early colthood. All that first night the
-two horses moved steadily south and east, climbing upward,
-following the twisting course of the divide. At
-dawn Midnight and the pinto fed close to a stand of
-balsam and spruce. Five mule deer and a band of elk
-fed on the same meadow. Midnight had a feeling that the
-deer and the elk would take alarm if anyone approached,
-or it might have been his early friendship with the old
-timber-line buck that made him select the spot as a feed
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>The deer and the elk paid little attention to the two
-horses. They recognized them as friends and harmless.
-Neither of them was tainted by man smell or the reek of
-a saddle blanket pungent with leather oil.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had learned another of the lessons of the
-wild, a lesson that had long since been mastered by the
-elk and the deer. He would feed at dawn and at dusk,
-when the dim light made rifle sights blur and when the
-eyes of the upright walking killer play tricks on him. All
-other wild things had learned that this was the law. The
-sunlighted meadows were death traps by day, but in the
-soft dusk of early morning or evening there was safety.
-The big killers obeyed the rule but they did it as much
-because their prey came out of hiding at that time as for
-protection.</p>
-
-<p>The band of elk was headed by a lordly bull who was
-master of the ten cows by virtue of his power and savage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-willingness to battle any other bull who challenged
-him. As soon as his own sons grew to the age where their
-antlers began to spread into sweeping weapons and their
-desires led them to notice the cows he drove them out of
-the band. They were then lone bulls for a time until they
-were able to win a harem of their own. Nor was he satisfied
-with defense of his cows. He challenged the world to
-come and try to wrest supremacy from him. His battle
-moods came in midsummer and fall when his shoulder
-veins were swelling with hot blood, and his antlers had
-hardened to polished lances of bone.</p>
-
-<p>The old wapiti bull was beginning to feel this pugnacious
-mood. For weeks he had been rubbing and polishing
-his antlers. They gleamed like the varnished surface
-of a piece of fine furniture. During the gray of dawn
-he had fed near the cows. Now that the white light from
-the sun-bathed peaks above was making the meadow
-bright he began to show signs of restlessness. The cows
-fed on, eager to fill their paunches before they sought
-deep cover to lie down. The old wapiti shook his horns
-and lifted his muzzle. He trotted to a little knoll well
-above his band. He was filled with courage and desire,
-proud of his fine antlers, conscious of the power within his
-twelve hundred pounds of weight. He halted and filled his
-lungs with air, raised his muzzle, and poured forth a guttural
-roar that increased in pitch to bugle tones, higher
-and higher until it was a blasting whistle which screamed
-through the still air of the mountainside. The high notes
-quavered and faded, ending in a half dozen savage
-grunts. The old bull seemed to know that he had just
-executed one of the most inspiring pieces of music in all
-nature’s mountain songs. He shook his head and listened
-intently.</p>
-
-<p>From a ridge above the challenge of the lord of the
-band was answered. The challenger’s bugle was not so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
-high and shrill nor so powerful, but it was eager and defiant.
-The bull on the knoll shook his head and grunted
-angrily, then he lifted his muzzle and sent his call ringing
-out through the high, thin air. Again the challenge
-was answered. A young bull was coming down the slope.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the challenger appeared, breaking
-out of the spruce at a trot, his head swinging back and
-forth. He was lighter than the old bull by a few pounds
-and his antlers were not so well filled, but he was big
-boned and young, a lone knight seeking the end of the
-lonesome trail, desiring to take his place at the head of a
-band of cows.</p>
-
-<p>The old bull squealed a few short, sharp blasts, his
-horns swept low, he charged to meet the invader. The
-young bull came on, his pace increasing to a fast lope.
-The two great brutes crashed together, their horns locking
-as they grunted and twisted. For several minutes
-they tussled in this manner, each trying to sweep the
-other off his feet. The young bull was forced to his knees
-but came up with a lunge which set the old one back.
-Then they parted and backed away, heads still lowered,
-spreading horns protecting vital parts of their bodies. For
-a moment they halted with eyes glaring and breath
-whistling into the grass, then they charged again and the
-force of the impact sent them both to their knees. The old
-bull was well aware of the advantage his few extra
-pounds gave him and he kept hammering away, thrusting
-the youngster to his knees, eager to weaken him so
-that he would expose himself to the ripping thrust of
-horns.</p>
-
-<p>The combatants had moved down the slope and the
-young bull was now on the downhill side, moving slowly
-toward the spot where Midnight and the pinto stood
-watching the battle. A yellow band of sunlight had
-slipped out across the grass. The mule deer, led by an old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-doe, had slipped into the timber to seek a hiding place
-for the day. The cow elk ceased feeding and stood watching
-the combat out of calm eyes which betrayed no hint
-of favor for either warrior. They would accept the lordship
-of the winner without question. After all, their real
-leader was a wise old cow who knew the ways of the
-trail and the best hiding places. The lord of the herd was
-master only for the time of the love moon.</p>
-
-<p>The smaller bull began to retreat a little before the onslaught
-of the old bull. They had been fighting a quarter
-of an hour and the youngster’s wind was beginning to
-give out. They had backed away, the challenger still savagely
-willing to charge but very short of breath. As they
-lunged together, the young bull went down; this time one
-foot slipped and he fell sidewise. Instantly the monarch
-shook his horns free, backed away a step and lunged, his
-lances lowered. The sharp daggers of bone ripped into
-the side and flank of the young bull. He floundered and
-struggled as the death wound racked him, then he got to
-his feet with an effort. Staggering but with his defenses
-again down and ready he lunged at the old bull. The
-monarch smashed at him. This time he was down with
-his whole side exposed and the victor was on him.</p>
-
-<p>But the old bull was at the end of his strength, too.
-He tried to tear his adversary into shreds but did not
-have the power. After a half dozen weak thrusts he
-backed away and stood, blowing and grunting savagely,
-while the youngster got to his feet and staggered toward
-the woods seeking a secluded spot where he could lie
-down.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight snorted and pawed. The cows shook their
-heads and turned toward the woods following the lead of
-the wise old cow. With a savage grunt the monarch
-trotted after them.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight turned away. With the pinto filly at his side<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-he trotted into the timber and there they bedded down
-for the day. That night they moved again, heading along
-a ridge with the white stars lighting the rocky trail. All
-night Midnight kept going and dawn found them at the
-edge of the high mesa. With the gray light about them
-they fed close to Sam’s deserted cabin. Midnight felt
-safer in these familiar surroundings. Even the cabin
-seemed to give a friendly protection to him. He crossed
-the meadow and halted near the head of the trail leading
-down into Shadow Canyon. The pinto was afraid of
-the cabin at first but when Midnight walked up to it in
-passing across the meadow and sniffed about, she joined
-him. The man smell was dead and old. It lacked the pungent
-freshness which roused fear and caused flight.</p>
-
-<p>The old yellowbelly whistler mounted his perch on the
-high rock and sounded an “all’s-well” whistle. The mesa
-came to life with the chipmunks singing their chorus,
-the prairie dogs barking, and the other chips racing
-about. With the coming of life to the meadow Midnight
-headed down the trail to cover.</p>
-
-<p>The two horses came to the crevice which lay across
-the ledge trail. It was no longer a barrier, being filled
-with rocks and torn tree trunks with gravel piled in the
-cracks. Midnight moved down into the sunken mass and
-over it. Together the two plunged up the far side. Now
-Midnight felt secure. With the high walls towering above
-him and the sheer drop into Shadow Canyon guarding
-the lower side, there was only the entrance across the debris-filled
-crevice and that was hidden from the main
-trail by bushes screening the rocky ledge.</p>
-
-<p>He set to feeding and the pinto joined him. They
-stayed in the shade of the aspen grove which afforded
-them complete protection from anyone who might halt
-on the rim above and look down. All such a pair of
-eyes would see was the pale-green canopy of the aspen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-grove. They grazed peacefully until they had eaten their
-fill, then Midnight led the pinto to the bed of needles under
-the Engelmann’s spruce over near the wall. There
-they lay down in the cool shade.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xiii" id="xiii"></a>13. Tex Takes the Trail</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">Tex</span> followed the trail of the mares until almost dark.
-He came up with them several times and sent them galloping
-into the lower valleys. He did not shoot any of
-them because he wished to leave them as an attraction
-for the black stallion. With less than half an hour of daylight
-left he headed over a ridge to one of the high-country
-cabins where food and horse feed were always
-kept ready for wandering cowpunchers and for the boys
-who rode the high range during the summer.</p>
-
-<p>As he slid from his saddle he saw that someone else
-was using the cabin for the night. Yellow light streamed
-out of its one dusty window and the smell of frying
-bacon and boiling coffee floated down to the corral. Tex
-unsaddled the bay, watered and grained him, then
-rubbed him down. He always cared for his horse before
-thinking of his own comfort.</p>
-
-<p>As he shoved open the cabin door he saw Major Howard
-and Shorty sitting at the plank table nailed to the
-wall under the window. They were just finishing a meal
-of hot biscuit, sugar syrup, bacon, and coffee which
-Shorty had fixed.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” Tex greeted them. “Any grub left?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Shorty grinned widely and the major nodded. Shorty
-shoved aside the packing box he had been sitting on.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll scorch some bacon and warm up the coffee,” he
-said. “I overestimated the boss’s appetite for biscuits, so
-there’s plenty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shorty made enough biscuits for six men,” the major
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Tex eased his lank frame down on the packing box.
-He was ravenously hungry. Reaching for a biscuit he
-broke it, exposing its snowy center. The major watched
-him as he crammed half the biscuit into his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been down to the meadow where you trapped
-those wild horses. You did a nice job, Tex.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex grunted as he shoved the other half of the biscuit
-into his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>The major added by way of defending himself against
-killing the mares:</p>
-
-<p>“Not a single head worth rounding up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon not,” Tex agreed. Then he leaned forward
-and spoke with considered slowness: “The stud got away
-and he’s a winner. He outran my bay on level ground
-in a straightaway run.”</p>
-
-<p>The major showed his interest at once. He had always
-wanted to capture a real wild stallion that had quality.
-He had an idea he could do some crossbreeding that
-might have interesting results.</p>
-
-<p>“Stallion?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“A black stud, long two-year-old. Fine racin’ legs, big
-chest, and the heart of a winner. He turned on me and
-come near knockin’ me out of my saddle.” Tex grinned as
-he remembered that charge.</p>
-
-<p>The major smiled too, an eager smile. “He must have
-spirit. Racing legs and body&mdash;h-mmm.” He picked up a
-biscuit absently and crumbled the corner of it. Then he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-shot a penetrating glance at Tex and asked, “And you
-think you know his sire and dam?”</p>
-
-<p>“That colt is out of Lady Ebony by the chestnut stud
-that led the wild band. The chestnut is the thief that
-stole your mare, major. The chestnut is gone, can’t figure
-exactly how he got killed, but I’m sure he’s dead. The
-black colt couldn’t handle him, not yet. But the black
-was running the band and he got the job too young.”
-Tex reached for another biscuit. “I reckon he’s learning
-fast, though.”</p>
-
-<p>Major Howard got out his pipe. He loaded it carefully,
-then lighted it. He was watching Tex narrowly.
-For a full minute he puffed deeply, the blue-white
-smoke curling up around his graying hair. When he spoke
-his voice lacked the assurance it usually carried.</p>
-
-<p>“You never give up once you get an idea, do you,
-Tex?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s as clear as day to me,” Tex said simply.</p>
-
-<p>“This long two-year-old can outrun anything on my
-ranch.” The major spoke almost to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“And rest while he’s doing it,” Tex said.</p>
-
-<p>“You better bring him in. He may not be so good as
-he looked today, but if he has the markings of that black
-mare I’ll know it. I’d like to experiment with a stallion
-like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I figure on bringing him in if it takes all summer.”
-Tex leaned forward. The bacon Shorty had set before
-him went unnoticed. “If you figure I’m right you could
-do something for Sam?” Tex knew he was treading on
-dangerous ground. Mention of Sam always irritated the
-major.</p>
-
-<p>“When I’m convinced, I’ll do what I can,” he said
-gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>Tex knew there was no use talking any more about it.
-He would round up the black and bring him in. Once<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-the major set eyes on the stallion he would know the
-black was Lady Ebony’s son. Then the major would get
-Sam out of his cell. Tex had the major figured that way.</p>
-
-<p>With supper over the men rolled up in their blankets.
-The major slept in the wall bunk while Tex and Shorty
-bedded down on the floor. They did not stay up longer
-than the time it took to wash the dishes and split some
-wood for the breakfast fire. They would all be up and
-in the saddle by daylight the next morning. Tex meant to
-ride the upper range and to map out his campaign. He
-had a feeling there was need for haste. The black stallion
-would have to be brought in that summer. Sam had
-to be got back to his high mesa if he was to come at all.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Tex was up before the other two
-men had wakened. He made coffee in the blackened pot
-and finished up what had been left of Shorty’s biscuits.
-With a can of tomatoes, a tin of fish and some coffee
-from the cupboard he left the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>The rising sun found him on a high ridge overlooking
-the sweep of the lower slopes of the Crazy Kills. He
-studied the meadows below, watching the timbered
-edges of the clearings, but he saw no sign of the black
-stallion. After that he set about checking the meadows,
-following the trails from valley to valley. About noon
-he came on two of the wild mares. He did not alarm
-them and they did not know he had seen them. Later he
-came on three more in a meadow far from where he had
-located the first two. At four that afternoon he found
-two others feeding beside a stream miles from the others.
-And he had come across no sign of the black stallion,
-not even his tracks. He began to wonder what had happened
-to the colt. And he was beginning to wonder if
-the band had not separated for good. The mares he had
-come on had been feeding or lying down. They had not
-seemed to be looking for the others. Tex refused to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
-worried, but he rode until darkness forced a halt. He
-built a little fire to heat water for coffee. He had eaten
-the tinned fish and tomatoes at noon. But he was determined
-to camp where he was and go on with the search
-in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Tex rode until evening without coming
-on the black or crossing his trail. He was convinced now
-that the stallion was making no effort to round up the
-mares, that he was too young and inexperienced to have
-developed band leadership. He knew he faced a tough
-job but he had no idea of quitting. He would need a pack
-horse and supplies to stay in the hills more than two days.
-That meant he would have to return to the home ranch.</p>
-
-<p>He rode back to the high-line cabin and cooked a meal.
-There was no one at the cabin and he rolled up on the
-bunk as soon as he had eaten. The next day he headed
-for the home ranch.</p>
-
-<p>The major did not object when Tex told him his plans.
-But Tex knew that a week would probably be all he
-would be allowed for the hunt. The major would be
-calling him in to take charge of other work. He was convinced
-his boss was giving him this time so that he would
-have a chance to settle the matter that had been between
-them since Sam was taken away.</p>
-
-<p>Tex rode into the high country. He laid his plans carefully.
-He meant to cover the range from timber line down
-in a careful check of all meadows and feed grounds. He
-was sure he would miss no spot where a wild horse
-would stay because he had ridden the Crazy Kill slopes
-for fifteen years and knew every foot of the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Methodically he worked, from the north limits toward
-the south. He accounted for all the wild horses except
-Midnight and the pinto filly. At the end of the week he
-was worried. The black stallion must have gone down
-into the desert or over the divide into the wild country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-beyond Major Howard’s range. He had to admit he had
-failed in a job that seemed to him important. He knew
-there was no use trying to make a ride into the desert.
-That vast expanse of sand and canyons stretched clear
-to the Mexican border, while the wild country beyond
-the Crazy Kills was worse than the desert. It was canyon-slotted
-and grown dense with timber. No ranchers used
-it as a range. It was virgin wilderness and it was a hundred
-miles deep.</p>
-
-<p>When Major Howard ordered Tex to take charge of
-the drive that would bring the new herds of cattle to the
-high country from the railroad yards he did not object.
-He had had his chance and had failed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At the foot of the high walls overlooking Shadow
-Canyon, Midnight and the pinto stayed hidden in the
-aspen grove by day. At night they either fed in the little
-meadow or climbed up to the high mesa. When they
-were on the high mesa they raced and played. They
-never stayed after dawn broke. Twice they scented man
-smell on the wind and dashed to cover along the ledge
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>The day Tex checked the high mesa for tracks or
-signs they were feeding below and had not been on top
-for several days. Rain had come and their tracks had
-been washed out. He had passed on after looking inside
-Sam’s cabin and noting how it was falling apart from
-disuse.</p>
-
-<p>The pinto pony trusted Midnight and he had his past
-experience to make him feel secure in his hideout. But he
-did not forget the lessons he had learned, and no buck
-deer was more alert and watchful than he.</p>
-
-<p>Many times Midnight led the pinto around the track
-he had laid out. They often ran by daylight, around and
-around, leaping over logs and rocks and pounding in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-reckless chase over the rough trail. Midnight could easily
-outdistance the filly, but he never ran away from her
-when she dropped behind.</p>
-
-<p>As the days passed, both horses became sleek and fat,
-but Midnight did not lose his speed or power. He never
-became lazy, because of the nervous, high spirits which
-filled him. He was fast coming to the place where he
-would not be satisfied with the company of one filly, but
-another season would pass before he was ready to go
-forth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In a town below the ridges and wild barrens, behind
-drab, gray walls old Sam had at last given up the fight.
-One morning he did not answer early call and they
-found him lying on his cot peacefully sleeping. He
-would not stir and seemed not to have the wiry strength
-that had carried him along. The warden and the doctor
-came. Sam was taken to the hospital and placed on a
-white bed. Outside the door of his room the doctor faced
-the warden.</p>
-
-<p>“The state will not be burdened over a couple of
-months longer by that old codger,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“What ails him?” the warden asked.</p>
-
-<p>“What would ail any wild thing that was cooped up
-in one of your cells?” the doctor asked, then turned
-abruptly away.</p>
-
-<p>The warden went back to his office and looked into
-Sam’s file. No one had taken any interest in the case except
-Tex and he had written only one letter because writing
-was something he seldom did. The warden put the
-file away and made a note of what the doctor had said.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xiv" id="xiv"></a>14. Beside the Castle Rocks</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">With</span> an uneasy jerk Tex tore open the envelope the
-major handed him. He was not used to getting letters
-and this one was postmarked at the state prison. He
-fished out a single sheet of paper and stared at it. The
-major had read the postmark and stood waiting for Tex
-to speak.</p>
-
-<p>There was a brief line at the beginning of the letter.
-The message was from Sam and the warden had written
-the letter for him. Tex turned away from the major and
-walked down to the horse corral before he read any
-further. He wanted to be alone. Leaning over the pole
-gate he finished the letter. The message was brief, very
-much like Sam. Tex’s lips moved as he repeated the
-words to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I put off writin’ figurin’ to see you. Reckon I won’t,
-so the warden is writin’ this to you. They got a buryin’
-spot down here they call Woodpecker Hill. It’s good
-enough fer an old gopher miner but I still got a hankerin’
-to get back to the top of the world. If it won’t put you
-out too much, Tex, I’d like to be planted near the ledge
-trail at the foot of the castle rocks. Jest lift the rock under
-the right front leg of the stove and you’ll find a poke
-of dust I cached. There’ll be enough in it to do the job.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-I want you should keep what’s left over. Figure I’ll hang
-on till I get a letter back from you. The doc says no, but
-I’ve fooled ’em before. Sam.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex folded the sheet into a wad and shoved it into
-the pocket of his chaps. He stared for a long time
-through the white sunlight. His bay gelding came over
-to the fence and nudged his arm. Tex turned around.</p>
-
-<p>“We shore let old Sam down,” he said grimly. “But
-this time we’ll not flop on him.”</p>
-
-<p>He reached over and caught the horn of his saddle
-which was tossed across the top pole of the corral. As
-he was jerking the cinch tight around the belly of the
-bay a few minutes later, the major’s shadow appeared
-near the gate. Tex did not turn around. He did not feel
-like telling the major anything. The last time he had tried
-to talk to him about getting Sam freed his boss had been
-irritated and short in his refusal. Tex had a feeling the
-major even believed he had invented the story about the
-black stud, with the help of Shorty, in order to get his
-sympathy. The major watched in silence until Tex faced
-the gate, then he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to have a look at the new stock. You can ride
-into the aspen range with me and show me around.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex nodded. There was no use in writing to Sam
-now. The mail would not be picked up until the next
-day. He could take a couple of days off and ride in, but
-he didn’t feel equal to facing the old man after the way
-he had let him down.</p>
-
-<p>By midafternoon the pair were high in the aspen
-country and close to the spruce belt. Tex had taken the
-major to the meadows where the new stock grazed. They
-had halted on a ridge as the major had a way of doing
-and were gazing over the vast country below. The major
-always got a thrill out of looking over his vast domain.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-He never tired of the rolling foothills and the wide,
-grassy valleys, all his.</p>
-
-<p>Tex could see the high mesa on the rim of Shadow
-Canyon. He could see the castle rocks where Sam wanted
-to be planted. A desire to ride down to the spot laid hold
-of him. He could get the poke of gold while he was there.
-When the major was ready to move on, Tex headed down
-the slope. Within an hour they broke out on the high
-meadow. The major looked across at Tex questioningly
-but said nothing. He knew none of the new stock were
-run that far south. But he was more interested in the letter
-Tex had got than he cared to show and was sure this
-visit had something to do with it. He feared the old man
-had died in prison, and the thought stirred the old train
-of doubts as to the course he had followed.</p>
-
-<p>They rode down to the castle rocks before going to the
-cabin. Tex dismounted and stood at the base of the rocks
-where Sam had said he wanted to lie. When he looked
-over the expanse of country below he knew why Sam
-had picked this spot. From the ledge he could see far
-across the hazy lower valley to the distant peaks of the
-Sleepy Range, while on the right he could look out over
-the purple expanse of the desert with its spires and red
-rims gleaming in the late sunlight. At his feet yawned
-Shadow Canyon. From its twilight depths came the
-rumble of a rushing stream. The music rose and fell in
-steady cadence. Tex drew in his breath sharply and
-turned toward the major.</p>
-
-<p>As he turned a flash of movement below caught his
-eye. He stepped closer to the canyon rim and looked
-down on a little meadow. At first he saw nothing but a
-little beaver lake, a grove of aspens, and a stand of
-spruce. Then a black horse flashed out of the timber
-running madly. Close on his heels came a pinto filly.
-They were heading straight at a barrier of logs. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
-reached the barrier and lifted like birds, sailing over
-it easily. Their manes and tails flowed out as they pounded
-along.</p>
-
-<p>“Look!” Tex called hoarsely as he pointed downward.</p>
-
-<p>The major slid from his horse and stood beside Tex.
-The flying horses had vanished into the aspen grove and
-Tex grunted disgustedly. In a moment they appeared
-again and took the log barrier in a mad leap. Both men
-stood in silence watching the big black stallion as he
-cleared the barrier and raced away. The horses vanished
-but appeared again as they charged around the little circle
-below. Then they vanished and did not appear again.</p>
-
-<p>For a long minute the two men faced each other. It
-was the major who spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Tex,” he said gruffly, “I’m a stubborn fool.” He held
-out his hand. “Let me see that letter you got from the
-state prison.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex dug out the letter and handed it to him. The
-major read it quickly. When he had finished he folded
-it carefully and handed it back to Tex. Relief and eagerness
-showed on his face, as he turned toward his horse.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll ride for the ranch. If I hit the trail hard enough
-I can catch the midnight train at Painted Rocks.”</p>
-
-<p>Tex grinned. He said nothing, but he was in his saddle
-before the major reached his horse.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<h2><a name="xv" id="xv"></a>15. Home to Stay</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noi"><span class="smcap">The</span> old yellowbelly whistler was uneasy. He scented
-the coming of a cold snap, a heavy snow perhaps. The
-aspens were flaming yellow, the oak brush purple and
-red, its rounded clumps looking like fine upholstery laid
-on an immense piece of furniture. The calico chips darted
-around in frantic haste as they gathered seeds to add to
-their bulging granaries. Even the rockchips were more
-active than usual. They did not spend so much time hugging
-their fat bellies and mooning into the distance. The
-dog colony was as noisy and busy as usual but there was
-a difference in their chatter. This was a time of uncertainty.
-Indian summer had to end. It had held the high
-country in its drowsy spell for many days. Now the air
-had a different feel.</p>
-
-<p>Down by the castle rocks there was a newly made pile
-of rocks. This disturbance of the scenery had upset the
-small folk of the meadow for a while but now they were
-used to it. The calico chips used it as a hiding place and
-even the whistlers had explored it carefully.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the meadow rang with an eager whinny,
-followed by a loud snort and the pounding of hoofs
-against the dry, hard ground. A black stallion and a pinto
-filly broke from the head of the Shadow Canyon trail.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-They raced wildly around the mesa, kicking and dodging.
-They swung down past the castle rocks and the black
-stallion made a magnificent show of shying and plunging
-as they passed the pile of rocks. Saluting the mound
-with a flash of his heels he raced back toward the old
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight slid to a halt before the cabin and called
-loudly. He advanced toward the door shaking his head
-and snorting, his eyes rolling wildly.</p>
-
-<p>The door of the cabin hung open. A blue-white wreath
-of smoke curled out and up into the air, then old Sam
-stepped through the doorway. He stood for a moment
-steadying himself, one hand against the casing, then he
-shuffled outside and sank down on the ancient willow
-chair. As he seated himself he dug into a pocket of his
-worn jacket and brought out a handful of dingy lump
-sugar.</p>
-
-<p>“No human critter could of got me outside today the
-way my rheumatiz joints is shoutin’ fer a storm,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>He held out one hand with two lumps of sugar in it.
-The black stallion edged closer, his legs trembling, his
-nostrils flaring eagerly. The pinto filly crowded ahead
-of him and her pink nose deftly whisked the sugar out of
-Sam’s palm. Old Sam chuckled as he placed two more
-lumps in his palm.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady, you act plumb scandalous fer a wild hoss,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight had edged close now. He gathered up the
-two lumps and crunched them eagerly. Even after weeks
-of coaxing and tempting Sam had not quieted all the
-fears in the heart of the stallion. Sam doled out the
-sweets slowly, making them last as long as possible.
-When they were gone he got to his feet, and picked up
-a tin pail beside the door. Walking to a bare spot of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-ground near the corner of the cabin he poured out a
-liberal measure of oats.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight stood watching, ready to charge away. The
-pinto shouldered up close to Sam, letting him run his
-hand along her neck. Watching her gather up the oats
-was too much for the black; he crowded in to get his
-share, but not until Sam had backed away.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight and the pinto gathered up every grain of
-oats, then they trotted out into the meadow and began
-feeding. Sam filled his pipe and settled back to let the
-sun warm his joints. He was glad his visitors had routed
-him out. The sun was really fine. After a few minutes of
-its warmth he began thinking about walking down to the
-new prospect hole he had dug at the base of the castle
-rocks. He chuckled to himself as he thought about it but
-he did not move. He was remembering how he had written
-to Tex asking him to dig a hole on that very spot. He
-wondered what Tex would have done if he had dug that
-hole and then discovered he had uncovered a vein of
-gold-bearing quartz. Sam had a feeling Tex would have
-dug a buryin’ hole and let it go at that. That was what
-he thought of Tex.</p>
-
-<p>Out on the meadow a chipmunk had mounted a stone.
-His voice rang out. “Chock! Chock! Chock!” like the
-rattle of an old alarm clock. Instantly every chipmunk in
-the meadow raced to his sing perch and the meadow
-rang with their song. The fat yellowbelly on guard
-stretched his neck and blasted a short whistle, then
-pulled in his neck with a deep chuckle. He always disapproved
-such a chatter.</p>
-
-<p>Sam’s pipe rolled to the corner of his mouth and turned
-upside down. One fumbling hand found the gold chain of
-his big watch. He pulled it out and bent above the dial.
-His lips moved as he counted. When the chorus died
-away he was grinning happily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“One hunnert eighty a minnit,” he mumbled. “That
-there’s a youngster jest comin’ into his growth. Come
-spring he’ll do two hunnert.”</p>
-
-<p>As he tucked the ancient watch back into his pocket
-he sniffed the air. Twisting his neck he looked up at the
-spruce ridge. Gray clouds raced above the tops of the
-trees, and he could hear the moaning of a cold wind
-rushing through the needles. Below the clouds moved a
-curtain of white, swirling flakes. Sam got to his feet. His
-watery eyes rested for a moment on a pile of baled hay
-stacked against the end of the cabin and flanked by a
-great stack of split firewood. Tex had fixed everything.
-Let the snows come, he’d be snug as any one of the yellowbellies.
-And the two horses would not have to worry
-either.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I’ll jest hole up fer a spell,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Down on the meadow Midnight had jerked up his head
-and was watching the storm sweep across the mesa.
-Sam stood at the door looking out on the scene until the
-form of the big stallion was swallowed by the wall of
-snow.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p140">As handsome as he is wild&mdash;that’s</p>
-
-<p class="center p180">MIDNIGHT</p>
-
-<p class="noi">Son of a beautiful purebred mare and a
-wild stallion, the gangling colt grows up
-under the stern law of the wild ... until his
-flying hooves and bitterly learned store
-of experience make him leader of his own
-untamed band.</p>
-
-<p class="noi">The thrilling tale of a freedom-loving horse
-in the Western mountains.</p>
-
-<p class="center">SCHOLASTIC BOOK SERVICES<br />
-<b>SBS</b> New York · London · Richmond Hill, Ontario</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="section">
-<hr class="divider" />
-</div>
-<div class="tn">
-<p class="center">Transcriber’s Note:</p>
-
-<p>Spelling and hyphenation have been retained as they appear in the
-original publication except as follows:</p>
-
-<ul class="nobullet">
-<li>Page 20<br />
-and cerainly limited <i>changed to</i><br />
-and certainly limited</li>
-
-<li>Page 95<br />
-Midnight back away a few yards <i>changed to</i><br />
-Midnight <a href="#backed">backed</a> away a few yards</li>
-
-<li>Page 103<br />
-One moonlight night as Midnight <i>changed to</i><br />
-One <a href="#moonlit">moonlit</a> night as Midnight</li>
-
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Midnight, by
-Rutherford George Montgomery (1894-1985)
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