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<h1>Midnight</h1>
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<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—unless prior written permission
has been obtained from the publisher—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">
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<h2><SPAN name="contents" id="contents"></SPAN>CONTENTS</h2></div>
<table summary="Contents">
<tr>
<th class="tdr">CHAPTER</th>
<th class="tdl"> </th>
<th class="tdr2">PAGE</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">1.</td>
<td class="tdl">Pals</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#i">1</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">2.</td>
<td class="tdl">Wild Horse</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#ii">10</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">3.</td>
<td class="tdl">Horse Thief</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#iii">20</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">4.</td>
<td class="tdl">Desert Winter</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#iv">25</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">5.</td>
<td class="tdl">Wild-Horse Drive</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#v">36</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">6.</td>
<td class="tdl">Midnight</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#vi">45</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">7.</td>
<td class="tdl">The Way of the High Country</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#vii">62</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">8.</td>
<td class="tdl">The Strong Survive</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#viii">75</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">9.</td>
<td class="tdl">Prisoner</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#ix">87</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">10.</td>
<td class="tdl">Escape</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#x">94</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">11.</td>
<td class="tdl">New Trails</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xi">108</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">12.</td>
<td class="tdl">Doom of the Band</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xii">120</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">13.</td>
<td class="tdl">Tex Takes the Trail</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xiii">140</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">14.</td>
<td class="tdl">Beside the Castle Rocks</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xiv">147</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="tdr">15.</td>
<td class="tdl">Home to Stay</td>
<td class="tdr2"><SPAN href="#xv">151</SPAN></td>
</tr>
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</SPAN></span></div>
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<div class="caption">Midnight tried to whirl but the ledge was too narrow.</div>
</div>
<hr class="divider" />
<h2><SPAN name="i" id="i"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="ii" id="ii"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</SPAN></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—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"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="iii" id="iii"></SPAN>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
<SPAN name="certainly" id="certainly"></SPAN><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"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</SPAN></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—charge is
stealing one black mare.”</p>
<p>Sam blinked and his eyes shifted to the sheriff’s face.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</SPAN></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—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"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="iv" id="iv"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="v" id="v"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="vi" id="vi"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</SPAN></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—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"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="vii" id="vii"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="viii" id="viii"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="ix" id="ix"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="x" id="x"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</SPAN></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
<SPAN name="backed" id="backed"></SPAN><ins title="Original has 'back'">backed</ins>
away a few yards, lowered his head,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</SPAN></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
<SPAN name="moonlit" id="moonlit"></SPAN><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"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="xi" id="xi"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="xii" id="xii"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</SPAN></span>
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.</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"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="xiii" id="xiii"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</SPAN></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—h-mmm.” He picked up a
biscuit absently and crumbled the corner of it. Then he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="xiv" id="xiv"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</SPAN></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>
<hr class="divider" />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</SPAN></span></div>
<h2><SPAN name="xv" id="xv"></SPAN>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"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</SPAN></span></div>
<p class="center p140">As handsome as he is wild—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 <SPAN href="#backed">backed</SPAN> away a few yards</li>
<li>Page 103<br/>
One moonlight night as Midnight <i>changed to</i><br/>
One <SPAN href="#moonlit">moonlit</SPAN> night as Midnight</li>
</ul></div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />