Читать книгу 30,000 On the Hoof - Zane Grey - Страница 8
Chapter Three
ОглавлениеLucinda awakened sometime in the night, coming out of a dream of a strange pale place, where she wandered down empty echoing streets, fearful lest she should be seen in her boy’s garb. The night was pitch dark and silent as the grave. The crickets, the wind, the brook had all but ceased their sounds. She was cold despite the blankets. She lay there shivering while the black canopy of the canvas changed to gray. Soon she heard sharp weird piercing yelps, wild and haunting.
Dawn came. The ring of an axe and splitting of wood told her that Logan had begun his work. Lucinda sat up with an impulse to go out and join him. But the keen air made her change her mind. When she heard a fire crackling, however, she threw back the blankets and hunted for her boots. By the time she had the second one laced her fingers were numb. She donned her coat, took her little bag and crawled out.
Logan was not in sight. Lucinda made for the fire. If it had felt good the night before what did it feel now? She had not known the blessing of heat. While she warmed her hands she gazed about. The grass was gray-white with frost; far across the open Logan appeared astride one of the horses, driving in the oxen. The sky in the east was ruddy, but the all-encompassing wall of pines appeared cold, forbidding. Logan had been thoughtful to put on a bucket of water to heat. Before he arrived at the camp Lucinda had washed her face and hands and combed her hair. This morning she braided it and let it hang.
“Howdy, settler,” she called to Logan.
“Well! Hello, red-cheeks! Say, but you’re good to see this morning. . . . How’d you rest?”
“Slept like a log. Awoke once, after a queer dream. I was in a deserted town wandering about in these pants. What made those barks I heard?”
“Coyotes. I like to hear them. But wolves make me shiver. I saw the track of a big lofer out there.”
“Lofer?”
“That’s local for wolf. Perhaps that track was made by Killer Gray. He’s got a black ruff, Lucinda. I’ll shoot him and cure his hide for a rug. We must live off the land.”
Lucinda helped him prepare breakfast. Afterward, while Logan hitched the oxen to the wagon Lucinda went after the second horse. He was not easy to catch and the best she could do was to drive him into camp where Logan secured him. The exercise made her blood tingle, but she was glad to warm hands and feet at the fire. The red in the east paled and the sun arose steely. Logan, remarking that the day was not going to be so good, advised Lucinda to procure her gloves and put a blanket on the seat.
Presently the oxen were swinging on, tirelessly, their great heads nodding in unison. Lucinda marveled at them. How patient, how plodding these gentle beasts of burden! She had her first inkling of the value of such animals to the settlers in the wilderness. Thick woods swallowed up the wagon and claimed it for hours. But Lucinda was more at ease because the cold wind was shut off and the sun shone now and then.
“Move over here and take your lesson,” said Logan, at length, and put the whip in Luanda’s hands.
“What’ll I do?” she asked, breathlessly.
“Drive,” he replied, laconically.
Before she realized it Lucinda was piloting a prairie-schooner. The oxen went along as well for her as for Logan. But what would she do when he left the wagon to handle the cattle? “It’s easy,” said Logan. “Much easier than driving a team.”
“But suppose they do something,” protested Lucinda.
“Yell ‘whoa’ when you want them to stop, ‘gee’ when you want to go to the right, ‘haw’ to the left, and when you start up—a crack of the whip and ‘gidap,’” replied Logan, with suppressed mirth.
“It’s not so funny,” said Lucinda petulantly. “It looks too easy. They do go right along—but it’s straight road. What if a herd of buffalo or band of Indians broke out of the woods. . . .”
“That sure wouldn’t be funny. But the buffalo are gone, Lucinda, and we put the Apaches on the reservation. Reminds me of Matazel.”
“Who was he?” asked Lucinda a little fearfully.
“Young Apache buck. Said to be one of old Geronimo’s sons. He sure didn’t favor that ugly old devil. Matazel looks a noble red man if ever an Indian gave reason for such a fool idea. Lucinda, the Navajo braves caught your fancy. Matazel would have done that and more. He had gray eyes—the most wonderful eyes! Wild, bright, fierce! I’ll never forget the look in them when he tapped me on the breast and said: ‘Matazel live—get even!’”
“My word! Logan, what ever did you do to incur his hatred?”
“Huh. I did a lot. I was one of General Crook’s scouts. Crook sent me out with some soldiers to round up Matazel and his braves. I trailed them across the mesa and cornered them. We had a skirmish. Nobody killed. We captured Matazel and sent him back to the reservation with the rest of Geronimo’s outfit. They’ll break out some day.”
“Won’t that be bad for the settlers?”
“I reckon it will. But no danger for us. We are a long way from the Cibeque.”
The wind increased until it began to blow the dust. This, added to the cold, induced Lucinda to crawl back over the seat and wrap herself in the blankets. Lucinda propped herself against the packs and gazed out, thinking wearily of the women who had crossed the plains in caravans. What incredible hardship and privation they must have endured! The dim, dark forest, with its threshing foliage, the open range with its flying dust, the lowering sky, the slow steady roll of wheels, the dry permeating pitchy odor that filled her nostrils—these held Lucinda’s senses until she fell asleep.
When she awakened Logan informed her that the lake was in sight. Cramped and stiff Lucinda crawled back on the seat with Logan. Gray pastures fringed by pine led to a wide sheet of water, dark as the clouds. She saw fences running up to cabins on the shore. The west side of the lake sheered up in a bold bronze bluff, while the road ran along the east shore, a ragged, rocky slope, desolate and uninviting to Lucinda’s gaze.
“Will these settlers want to take us in?” she asked.
“Sure. We’ll eat with them, but we’ll sleep same as last night. They’re crowded in those log shacks. You’ll be more comfortable in the wagon.”
“I’d like that better,” said Lucinda, with a sense of relief.
Lucinda found herself welcomed by Holbert and his womenfolk. If she had not been so cold and hungry and miserable she might have regarded that poor cabin and its plain inmates in some such way as she had the long day and the hard country. But she realized that what counted were protection and nourishment, and the kind hearts that furnished them. Holbert’s wife, two daughters, and a sister lived there with him. She gathered that one of the daughters was married and lived in an adjoining cabin. They seemed to take Lucinda’s advent as a matter of course. The married daughter was younger than Lucinda and had a baby. None of them had been to Flagg since spring—six months—and they were hungry for the news that was easy for Lucinda to furnish.
Presently the son-in-law came in, accompanied by a gray-furred, wild-looking dog. He at once joined Holbert and Logan in a discussion of cattle.
“What a strange dog!” exclaimed Lucinda, who loved dogs. “Is he a shepherd?”
“Half shepherd an’ half wolf,” replied the settler’s wife. “Her mother is John’s best cattle dog.”
“How interesting! Half wolf? I never saw a wolf. What’s her name?”
“Reckon she hasn’t none. She’s no good because she won’t run cattle an’ fights the other dogs. John would be glad to get rid of her.”
“Logan,” asked Lucinda, eagerly interrupting the trio of men, “may I have this dog, if Mr. Holbert will give her to me?”
“Why, sure. How about it, Holbert?”
“You’re welcome, if you can get her to go with you,” replied the settler.
Lucinda made overtures to the unwanted wolf-dog, and they were accepted. When presently Lucinda grew so drowsy from the hot fire that she could scarcely keep her eyes open, Logan came to her rescue. They bade their new friends good-night and left for their wagon. The dog came readily with Lucinda.
“Rustle up to bed before you freeze again,” said Logan, helping her along. “And here’s your dog. I liked his looks. I’ll bet he sticks to you.”
“It’s a she, Logan. What’ll I call her? . . . Come, doggie, you can sleep right here at my feet.”
“A good name always comes. . . . Luce, I’ll go back and finish my deal with Holbert. He’ll sell me some stock very cheap and give me more on credit. The drawback is there’s no one here to help me drive the cattle. But by gosh! If you’ll drive the oxen I’ll drive all the cattle Holbert will let me have.”
“I’ll try,” rejoined Lucinda, suppressing her fears because of his eager hope.
“There’s an old homestead half way to our place. If we can make that tomorrow night and turn the stock inside the fence we’ll be jake. Next night we’ll be home!”
Lucinda pulled off her boots, and folding her coat for a pillow crawled under the blankets. The dog nestled close to her. Outside the wind was blowing a gale. As Logan had laced up the front flaps of the wagon Lucinda was protected. But to hear it was enough. It whistled hauntingly around the canvas and roared through the trees overhead and swept away scattering the pebbles and propelling the dust along the road. Finally Lucinda’s drowsy spell ended in sleep.
Logan’s voice penetrated Lucinda’s deep slumbers. “Daybreak, Luce! Pile out and get going. . . . Did your dog stay with you? . . . Well, she did, by gosh! No man or varmint who ever pleased you would quit.”
“Compliment so early?—Oh, Logan, I can’t get up. It’s so nice and warm in here. Ughh! . . . I guess I’m a tenderfoot.”
“Well, Luce dear, you won’t be one by nightfall, that’s a good bet,” replied Huett, grimly. “I’m going to start you out with the oxen and follow you with the stock. Then I’ll be close to you. So you can’t stop to pick flowers by the roadside.”
The day promised better than yesterday. Clouds were wanting in the brightening sky and the wind had abated. Still Lucinda’s fingers ached again when she had laced her boots. After breakfast the womenfolk detained Lucinda for a little, while Holbert accompanied Logan out to the wagon. But Lucinda soon followed, promising to stop on her first trip into Flagg.
“Hope thet’ll be soon. But winter’s comin’,” called Mrs. Holbert, after her. “Don’t get in front of thet bull John sold your man. He’s wilder’n a skeered jack-rabbit!”
Lucinda’s breast felt as if it had suddenly been crushed. She was glad the Holberts could not see her face as she ran off with the dog leaping at her side. Her husband and Holbert were not in sight, but she heard a halloaing over in the corral. Presently Logan appeared riding one horse and leading another.
“Climb aboard, Luce,” he said, briskly, in a matter-of-fact tone. “Better keep the dog with you. Here, coyote—say! there’s a name for her.”
“Coyote? Oh, it’s pretty,” replied Lucinda, as she climbed up. “Here, lift her up . . . Well! She doesn’t need to be packed. Logan, I believe she won’t have to be tied.”
Huett leaped up to the seat and yelled: “Gadep!” The oxen moved away with the wagon creaking. “Gee! Gee!” They turned into the main road. “Now, Luce, it’s all plain sailing, without a turn-off for fifteen miles—to the old homestead. We’ve got to make it before dark. . . . Put on your gloves. . . . Gosh! if we make it with all my stock—one brindle bull, a mean cuss, eight cows, six two-year-old steers, and five heifers—Oh! I’ll feel rich. But I’ll have to ride some.”
With outward composure Lucinda took the whip he tendered her, and averted her face. Was the man stark mad to set her this task? Or was he paying her the tribute due the women of the Oregon Trail? She chose not to let him guess her perturbation. Logan leaped off while the wagon was moving.
“Good luck, old girl!” he called, happily. “If this isn’t great? Luce Huett, ox-driver of the Arizona range! Whoopee!”
Lucinda failed completely to share his enthusiasm, although she was glad to find that a really momentous occasion could pierce his practicality. She was left alone on that high driver’s seat, too high to leap off without risking life and limb. Coyote regarded her with intelligent eyes, as if she understood Lucinda’s predicament. Lucinda held the whip with nerveless hand. The wagging beasts plodded on unmindful of her tightly oppressed breast and staring eyes. Ahead the road followed the lake shore for miles, as far as she could see. Her ponderous steeds could not turn to the left, but suppose they turned to the right? The wagon and she, with her trunks of pretty clothes and her chest full of even more precious and perishable belongings, and Logan’s utensils and supplies for his great enterprise—these must all go toppling down into the lake. But while Lucinda watched with uncertain breath the oxen traveled along, slowly and steadily, ponderously, as they had done the day before. Probably they were not even aware that a woman-driver now held the whip. Lucinda hugged that comforting thought to her heart. She determined not to yell “gee,” “haw,” or “whoa” until necessity compelled it; and gradually her fears subsided. She could look at the slope and out upon the lake, and far ahead with a growing sense of something beside the risk of the situation. She was doing an unprecedented thing. Driving a prairie-schooner drawn by oxen! Here was an amazing fact that should have indulged her primitive side to the full. But that part of her seemed in abeyance.
“I had an idea school teaching was hard,” she soliloquized. “But this pioneer game! . . . Oh, I do love Logan!”
The sun came up glaringly hot. Lucinda removed her heavy coat. When she looked back she thought she saw the dust-obscured cattle running the other way, and before she realized disloyalty to Logan she hoped they were.
The time came, however, when she realized her mistake. A breeze from behind brought a smell of dust, then the sound of hoofs. Peering back Lucinda saw that Logan’s stock was not far behind. Then through the dust she espied him, and on the moment he appeared to be throwing stones with a violence that suggested impotent fury. Lucinda had it in her to laugh. “Serves him right—the cowboy cattleman husband who does not have time even for a honeymoon!”
Almost before she realized it she had reached the end of the lake, where the road turned across a bare flat to enter the forest. The oxen apparently saw nothing save the road, and they kept on it, oblivious of the cattle behind. Lucinda also made the surprising discovery that the sun stood nearly overhead. She was hot and thirsty, and she could not find the canteen that Logan had stuck somewhere under the seat.
As the wagon rolled around a bend in the road Lucinda looked back. The cattle were strung out. On the moment Logan was chasing some wild heifers that had swerved far off the course. The cows looked dusty and tired. Then Lucinda saw the bull. In fact he bellowed on the instant. She had to see him. So close behind that he had driven the haltered horse right on the wheels of the wagon! A dusty beast with wide horns and a huge head with eyes of green fire and a red tongue hanging out! Lucinda conceived the fearful idea that he would frighten the horse, charge the wagon, and perhaps gore the oxen into a stampede.
This direful catastrophe failed to materialize. The oxen gained the woods, where the wide canvas top brushed the foliage on each side.
Meanwhile the hours had been passing. Soon the character of the woods gave way to scaly ground covered with brush and scattered oaks, then a large oval open gray with sage, and centered in a depression which had at one time held water. Lucinda’s quick eyes caught sight of a band of fleet gray-rumped graceful animals fleeing behind a coal black leader. They flashed into the forest on the far side.
Some time in the afternoon Logan passed her to the left, making a cut off across the sage. He was at full gallop in pursuit of some of his stock. He rounded them up and turned them back with the others. After a while, far in the distance, Lucinda espied an old cabin and a fence. Logan drew far ahead. She saw him drive his stock through the fence or around it.
Lucinda was half an hour covering the intervening space. She needed all that time to recover her equanimity. But she need not have concerned herself about Logan. It transpired that at sunset when she drove up to the old cabin and yelled, “Whoa!” she came upon Logan sitting on a log, grimy with dust and sweat, red as fire where he wiped the black off, and manifestly possessed by an elation that had just banished a very ignoble rage.
“How’d you make it—when I wasn’t close?” he asked.
“Just fine. But that bull gave me a scare.”
“I reckon. I’ll kill him yet. Of all the damn ornery muddle-headed beasts I ever had to do with—he’s the worst. . . . Wife, I worried myself sick about you, all for nothing.”
“Yes, you did,” scoffed Lucinda, secretly pleased. She got off with Coyote leaping down after her. The ground felt queer—or else her legs were insensible. “Where do we camp? And where’s the water?”
“Holbert said there’s a spring behind the cabin. Reckon we’ll camp right here.”
Lucinda untied the swinging buckets and with two of them started to hunt for water. Disillusion and weariness hung on her like wet blankets; nevertheless some feeling antagonistic to them worked upon her. A few plaintive flowers, primrose and dahlia, growing out of the weeds beside the cabin, eloquently told Lucinda that a woman had tended their parent roots there once upon a time. Perhaps a tenderfoot woman like herself! There was tragedy in the vacant eye-like windows. She was crossing a level grassy place when Coyote sprang back with a bark. Bsszzz! A loud buzzing rattle sent Lucinda’s nerves tingling.
“That’s a rattler. Look out!” shouted Logan, from behind. He came on a heavy run. “There! See him? A timber rattlesnake.”
Lucinda saw a thick snake black and yellow, scaly and ugly, glide under the cabin. “That’s all right,” she said to the perturbed Logan. “I’m not afraid of snakes.”
“Well, don’t go kicking one of those boys in the grass. . . . Here’s a trail.”
They discovered the clear bubbling spring of cold water, which made the difference, Logan stated, between a good and a poor camp. On the way back Lucinda peeping into the log-cabin became virtually obsessed by wonder and dread. The littered, earthen floor, the blackened fireplace, the rude shelves and the bedstead of poles, told a story that saddened and shocked her. What had happened there? How little eastern people realized the crude living of those who set their faces West! Lucinda did not want Logan to find out how strongly she felt. She asked him if he had seen the beautiful black horned animal leading the white and tan ones across the open.
“Sure did. Golly, I wanted my rifle. That was a black antelope, king of that herd. Holbert has seen him for years.”
“Logan, you wouldn’t kill him, would you?” she asked, gazing at him in horror.
“Reckon I would. Wild animals sort of excite me. I like to hunt. I’ll bet we make the acquaintance of Gray, that black-ruffed lofer.”
“I hope not, if you must murder everything;” returned Lucinda sharply. Logan stared at her then stomped away with a puzzled frown on his face. Lucinda remembered how she used to fight her brothers and their comrades for chasing chipmunks along the rail-fences. How they would yell and run, wild as any young savages! But she must conquer her disgust at Logan’s passion to kill, she knew, regardless of her own feeling in the matter.
Supper was soon over and the chores finished. The lonely night clamped down upon the forest. Lucinda was glad to crawl into her wagon-bed and stretch out—glad that weariness inhibited thought. Her slumbers were punctuated by dreams of an enormous bull and a huge snake. Logan routed her out in the gray of dawn. Before sunrise the wagon was packed and the oxen ready for Lucinda.
“I’ll follow, same as yesterday,” said Logan, imperturbably, as she climbed up to the seat. “I’m not sure about all the road. But it’s most as good as that we’ve come over. There’s a long down-hill stretch through the woods. When you hit that you’ll be getting near home. But I’ll be on your heels before we get there. Good luck.”
“Let me try to start them,” said Lucinda, after she had helped Coyote up. She uncoiled the long whip and tried to crack it. She did make a noise, but that was the end of the leather thong lashing her back.
“Gadep!” she shouted, at the top of her lungs. The oxen obeyed at once, to her surprise, and relief, and the wagon was on its way.
“Turn left,” called Logan. He waved his hat.
“Haw! . . . Haw!” yelled Lucinda. They wagged to the left and straightened out on the road, headed south.
“Say,” shouted Logan, gleefully, “let me drive the oxen and you drive that bull!”
“I should say not!” retorted Lucinda, refusing to allow her husband’s flattery to inflate her egotism. Something was bound to happen—she just knew it.
The morning was warm, compared to the others before it. There was no frost. When she drove into the forest she had an agreeable surprise. Jays were screeching, squirrels were chattering. Gray deer with white tails up bounded away from the road. Presently Lucinda came upon a flock of wild turkeys, scratching in the grass under the pine saplings. Those near the road ran with a put-put, put-put-put. But most of them let the wagon go by without taking flight. The sight greatly pleased Lucinda.
As the day progressed, the heat poured down from the sun and rose like transparent veils of smoke from the ground. Lucinda grew unbearably hot and wet. Then she ran into the stretch of dust that Logan had mentioned. It appeared to be half a foot deep on the road, and every step of the oxen sent up great yellow puffs, thick and dry, that rolled back upon Lucinda. Her clothes became as yellow as the roadside; the dust ran off her sombrero; her gloves filled; she gasped and choked and nearly suffocated. “Whoa!” she finally yelled in desperation to her oxen. They stopped, as if glad for a respite. The dust pall rolled back, so that Lucinda could breathe. Her nostrils were clogged. She could smell no longer. Then she remembered the silk scarf which Logan had advised for this very emergency. She tied the ends around her neck and drew the wide fold up over her nose. This was stifling, yet not so unendurable as the dust. At her call the oxen lurched on and again she was enveloped. Then followed an almost insupportable period, the length of which could only be computed by slow hateful miles. The tears that Lucinda shed saved her from being blinded.
Presently the oxen floundered into dust that was so suffocating that they halted of their own accord. Lucinda coughed and choked miserably. Would this horrible day never end? She felt that she could not bear it longer. The afternoon must be waning, and when the air cleared somewhat, she looked around for the position of the sun. It was low in the sky and shone dark red through the pall. Their destination could not be far off now, but despite her misery, she hoped that Logan’s Canyon was not located in this terrible country. Where was Logan? Suddenly a distant yell quickened Lucinda’s pulse. She looked back. Dust clouds far behind!
“Gadep!” she called. But the oxen did not budge. She called louder. Then she yelled. But the gentle long-suffering beasts of burden had rebelled at last. Lucinda did not blame them. She looked back. That terrible bull was coming at a gallop. Swift terror shook Lucinda. Suppose he ran into us, she thought wildly. She yelled hoarsely and cracked the whip, but the drooping oxen never swung an inch under the wooden yoke.
A bawl and pound of hoofs behind elicited sharp barks from the dog. Coyote leaped to the ground and dashed back. Lucinda thanked her stars that she was high up on the wagon seat. The bull, his hide as yellow as the road, dashed about the wagon, his huge head lowered at the snapping dog. He lunged this way and that. Coyote nipped him on the nose. Then with a bellow he charged and in blind fury or by accident ran into the oxen with a terrific crash. The shock nearly upset the wagon. Lucinda screamed. The bull sprawled as the oxen, leaping ahead, struck him with the yoke. Down the road the oxen galloped madly, Lucinda holding on to the seat, terrified. They were running off, going faster every moment. The wagon rolled and swayed, but careened along fast enough to keep ahead of the great stream of dust which rolled from under the oxen’s ponderous hoofs.
Lucinda realized she must leap for her life. Sooner or later the oxen would run off the road into a log or a ditch; but every time she essayed to get a hold and a footing which would enable her to spring clear a bump would throw her back. The yellow road flashed under her; the trees blurred; the ground appeared like moving sheets of gray. A heavy clattering thud of hoofs mingled with the rolling creaking roar of the wagon. Alas! for her trunks and Logan’s treasured possessions!
The oxen sheered off the road toward brush and trees. They were slowing down of their own accord or the soft going retarded them. Lucinda made up her mind to leap into the brush. She stood up, leaning out, holding desperately to the canvas-covered hoop. But before she could jump the oxen plunged into a wash, the wheels hit a bank with a tremendous shock, and Lucinda shot as if from a catapult far out into the brush. Thick branches broke her fall. Still she landed on the ground hard enough to make her see a shower of sparks.
She struggled to her feet, dizzy, scratched, torn, but sound in limb. A few rods beyond the wagon stood upright with the heaving oxen halted by the brush. The extra horse that had been haltered was missing. Lucinda staggered out to a log at the edge, and there she sank down, panting, scarcely able to believe her good fortune, suddenly freed of mingled terror and anger.
Then she saw that Coyote had stopped the bull a short distance up the valley. Logan appeared beyond urging on the spent straggling bunch of cattle. He chased the bull in among them, and riding from one side to the other shunted them off the road on Lucinda’s side, passed her with a wild shout and drove them into the woods. Because of that move Lucinda knew gratefully they had not far to go.
She rested endeavoring to remove some of the travel stains and the blood on her wrists where the brush had scratched her. Coyote sought Lucinda out and sank to the ground, her red tongue protruding, and her heavy coat yellow with dust. Presently Lucinda espied the horse that had been tethered behind the wagon. She secured it and led it back to the oxen. Oppression from her exertion and fright weighed heavily upon her.
At length Logan rode back to her, black as a coal-heaver; yet nothing could have hidden his triumphant air, his grim mastery, his gay possession of success.
“Done!” he cried, ringingly. “Not a hoof lost! But oh, what a hell of a drive! . . . What happened to you, Luce?”
“Oh, nothing—much,” she answered, calling upon a sense of humor that eluded her.
“But you look queer. And the wagon there—in the brush! . . . But say, Luce, your face—it’s all scratched.”
“That awful bull! He butted into the oxen. They ran off. Down here they turned off the road, hit a bank and pitched me into the brush.”
Logan leaped off to approach her with earnest solicitude. “You poor kid! I was afraid something had happened. I shouldn’t have left you so far ahead. But are you hurt, dear?”
“No. Only a scratch or two.”
“Thank God for that!” He shook his head in wonderment. “I can’t get over how my luck holds.” He ran to the wagon, then examined wheels and tongue and the oxen. Evidently no damage had been done, for he mounted the seat and with yells drove the oxen out of the brush.
“All right. Come on, honey. Get up while I tie the horses behind . . . It won’t be long now, Luce. Sycamore Canyon! My range! Our home!”
Lucinda had lost her hopes and what little curiosity she might have had. Logan drove into the woods, along what appeared to have once been a road. Oxen and wagon jarred heavily over saplings. After about a mile or less Lucinda saw a light space through the woods. The green failed, and far beyond and above appeared again, only dimmer. There was an opening and a valley—a canyon Logan had said—just ahead. On the left side of the road a rocky ledge rose. Logan drove through a gap between the ledge and a brushy bank, halted and dismounted to carry poles and small logs with which to improvise a gate closing the opening. How energetic he was and tireless! There seemed a growing passion within him. Lastly he hauled a log that two men might well have found burdensome, which he placed across the gap.
“Luce girl,” he said, intensely, as he mounted beside her. “Our stock is down in the canyon. Fenced in, all save a few holes in the rock rim they’ll never find before I close them. Aha! . . . I’ll show you pronto.” A great weight seemed lifted from his shoulders.
Lucinda could not look just yet. She watched Logan jump off the wagon, untie the horses at the back and drive them past the wagon, down what appeared a narrow overgrown road. She saw him take an axe and chop down a small pine as thick at the base as his thigh. The whole bushy tree, by prodigious effort, he dragged behind the wagon and secured with a chain.
“What’s that for?” she asked him as he returned.
“Just a drag to hold us back. Pretty steep. Hold on now and look. You’ll see the greatest valley in all the West!”
In spite of herself Lucinda was compelled to gaze. A long, winding, apparently bottomless gorge yawned beneath them. As the wagon lurched down the grade this thing Logan called a canyon gradually became visible. It struck Lucinda with appalling force: a gray granite-walled abyss widening to the south, yawning up at her as if to swallow her. It appeared narrow just below, but it was not narrow. As all this deceitful West it was not what it appeared. A ribbon of water and waste of white sand wound through the center of it, to disappear round a bend; beyond the canyon widened out into a great basin inclosed by yellow slopes and pine-fringed rims.
Lucinda had to hold on tightly to keep from being thrown off the seat. As the wagon rolled deeper into the declivity, brush on one side and bluff on the other obscured Lucinda’s view. The grade steepened. Screeching brakes and crunching wheels increased their clamor. Despite the oxen holding back and the drag of the pine tree behind, the wagon rolled and bumped too fast for safety. Lucinda held on to her seat although she wondered bitterly why she clung to it so dearly. Then suddenly the pine tree behind broke or pulled loose; the wagon rolled down upon the oxen, forcing them into a dead run, and swaying dangerously one side to the other. Barely in time for safety it rattled out upon the level open of the canyon floor and came to a jarring stop. Manifestly unable to control his elation, Logan drove across a flat of seared, bleached grass, across a shallow brook and bar of sand, up a considerable grade to a flat where big pines stood far apart and a white-barked tree shone among them.
“Whoa!” he yelled, in stentorian voice of finality, that echoed from the black looming slope above. He threw away his whip and giving Lucinda a grimy, sweat-laden embrace, leaped to the ground, and held out his arms to help her down.
“Sycamore Canyon, sweetheart!” he said, with husky emotion. “Here’s where we homestead.”
But Lucinda did not move nor respond on the moment. She gazed about spellbound, aghast. The drab, silent rocks, the lonely pines shouted doom at her. The brook babbled in mockery. There was no view, no outlook except down the gray monotonous canyon with its terrible, forbidding walls. Savage wilderness encompassed her on all sides. Solitude reigned there. No sound, no brightness, no life! She would be shut in always. A pioneer wife chained irrevocably to her toil and her cabin! A low strange murmuring, the mysterious voice of the wild, breathed out of the forest. The wind in the pines! It seemed foreboding, inevitable, awful, whispering death to girlish hopes and dreams.