The Virginian
IV
DEEP INTO CATTLE LAND
Morning had been for some while astir in Medicine Bow before I left my
quilts. The new day and its doings began around me in the store, chiefly at the
grocery counter. Dry-goods were not in great request. The early rising cow-boys
were off again to their work; and those to whom their night's holiday had left
any dollars were spending these for tobacco, or cartridges, or canned provisions
for the journey to their distant camps. Sardines were called for, and potted
chicken, and devilled ham: a sophisticated nourishment, at first sight, for
these sons of the sage-brush. But portable ready-made food plays of necessity a
great part in the opening of a new country. These picnic pots and cans were the
first of her trophies that Civilization dropped upon Wyoming's virgin soil. The
cow-boy is now gone to worlds invisible; the wind has blown away the white ashes
of his camp-fires; but the empty sardine box lies rusting over the face of the
Western earth.
So through my eyes half closed I watched the sale of these tins, and grew
familiar with the ham's inevitable trademark—that label with the devil and his
horns and hoofs and tail very pronounced, all colored a sultry prodigious
scarlet. And when each horseman had made his purchase, he would trail his spurs
over the floor, and presently the sound of his horse's hoofs would be the last
of him. Through my dozing attention came various fragments of talk, and
sometimes useful bits of knowledge. For instance, I learned the true value of
tomatoes in this country. One fellow was buying two cans of them.
"Meadow Creek dry already?" commented the proprietor.
"Been dry ten days," the young cow-boy informed him. And it appeared that
along the road he was going, water would not be reached much before sundown,
because this Meadow Creek had ceased to run. His tomatoes were for drink. And
thus they have refreshed me many times since.
"No beer?" suggested the proprietor.
The boy made a shuddering face. "Don't say its name to me!" he exclaimed. "I
couldn't hold my breakfast down." He rang his silver money upon the counter.
"I've swore off for three months," he stated. "I'm going to be as pure as the
snow!" And away he went jingling out of the door, to ride seventy-five miles.
Three more months of hard, unsheltered work, and he would ride into town again,
with his adolescent blood crying aloud for its own.
"I'm obliged," said a new voice, rousing me from a new doze. "She's easier
this morning, since the medicine." This was the engineer, whose sick wife had
brought a hush over Medicine Bow's rioting. "I'll give her them flowers soon as
she wakes," he added.
"Flowers?" repeated the proprietor.
"You didn't leave that bunch at our door?"
"Wish I'd thought to do it."
"She likes to see flowers," said the engineer. And he walked out slowly, with
his thanks unachieved. He returned at once with the Virginian; for in the band
of the Virginian's hat were two or three blossoms.
"It don't need mentioning," the Southerner was saying, embarrassed by any
expression of thanks. "If we had knowed last night—"
"You didn't disturb her any," broke in the engineer. "She's easier this
morning. I'll tell her about them flowers."
"Why, it don't need mentioning," the Virginian again protested, almost
crossly. "The little things looked kind o' fresh, and I just picked them." His
eye now fell upon me, where I lay upon the counter. "I reckon breakfast will be
getting through," he remarked.
I was soon at the wash trough. It was only half-past six, but many had been
before me,—one glance at the roller-towel told me that. I was afraid to ask the
landlady for a clean one, and so I found a fresh handkerchief, and accomplished
a sparing toilet. In the midst of this the drummers joined me, one by one, and
they used the degraded towel without hesitation. In a way they had the best of
me; filth was nothing to them.
The latest risers in Medicine Bow, we sat at breakfast together; and they
essayed some light familiarities with the landlady. But these experiments were
failures. Her eyes did not see, nor did her ears hear them. She brought the
coffee and the bacon with a sedateness that propriety itself could scarce have
surpassed. Yet impropriety lurked noiselessly all over her. You could not have
specified how; it was interblended with her sum total. Silence was her apparent
habit and her weapon; but the American drummer found that she could speak to the
point when need came for this. During the meal he had praised her golden hair.
It was golden indeed, and worth a high compliment; but his kind displeased her.
She had let it pass, however, with no more than a cool stare. But on taking his
leave, when he came to pay for the meal, he pushed it too far.
"Pity this must be our last," he said; and as it brought no answer, "Ever
travel?" he inquired. "Where I go, there's room for a pair of us."
"Then you'd better find another jackass," she replied quietly.
I was glad that I had not asked for a clean towel.
From the commercial travellers I now separated myself, and wandered alone in
pleasurable aimlessness. It was seven o'clock. Medicine Bow stood voiceless and
unpeopled. The cow-boys had melted away. The inhabitants were indoors, pursuing
the business or the idleness of the forenoon. Visible motion there was none. No
shell upon the dry sands could lie more lifeless than Medicine Bow. Looking in
at the store, I saw the proprietor sitting with his pipe extinct. Looking in at
the saloon, I saw the dealer dealing dumbly to himself. Up in the sky there was
not a cloud nor a bird, and on the earth the lightest straw lay becalmed. Once I
saw the Virginian at an open door, where the golden-haired landlady stood
talking with him. Sometimes I strolled in the town, and sometimes out on the
plain I lay down with my day dreams in the sagebrush. Pale herds of antelope
were in the distance, and near by the demure prairie-dogs sat up and scrutinized
me. Steve, Trampas, the riot of horsemen, my lost trunk, Uncle Hughey, with his
abortive brides—all things merged in my thoughts in a huge, delicious
indifference. It was like swimming slowly at random in an ocean that was smooth,
and neither too cool nor too warm. And before I knew it, five lazy imperceptible
hours had gone thus. There was the Union Pacific train, coming as if from shores
forgotten.
Its approach was silent and long drawn out. I easily reached town and the
platform before it had finished watering at the tank. It moved up, made a short
halt, I saw my trunk come out of it, and then it moved away silently as it had
come, smoking and dwindling into distance unknown.
Beside my trunk was one other, tied extravagantly with white ribbon. The
fluttering bows caught my attention, and now I suddenly saw a perfectly new
sight. The Virginian was further down the platform, doubled up with laughing. It
was good to know that with sufficient cause he could laugh like this; a smile
had thus far been his limit of external mirth. Rice now flew against my hat, and
hissing gusts of rice spouted on the platform. All the men left in Medicine Bow
appeared like magic, and more rice choked the atmosphere. Through the general
clamor a cracked voice said, "Don't hit her in the eye, boys!" and Uncle Hughey
rushed proudly by me with an actual wife on his arm. She could easily have been
his granddaughter. They got at once into a vehicle. The trunk was lifted in
behind. And amid cheers, rice, shoes, and broad felicitations, the pair drove
out of town, Uncle Hughey shrieking to the horses and the bride waving unabashed
adieus.
The word had come over the wires from Laramie: "Uncle Hughey has made it this
time. Expect him on to-day's number two." And Medicine Bow had expected him.
Many words arose on the departure of the new-married couple.
"Who's she?"
"What's he got for her?"
"Got a gold mine up Bear Creek."
And after comment and prophecy, Medicine Bow returned to its dinner.
This meal was my last here for a long while. The Virginian's responsibility
now returned; duty drove the Judge's trustworthy man to take care of me again.
He had not once sought my society of his own accord; his distaste for what he
supposed me to be (I don't exactly know what this was) remained unshaken. I have
thought that matters of dress and speech should not carry with them so much
mistrust in our democracy; thieves are presumed innocent until proved guilty,
but a starched collar is condemned at once. Perfect civility and obligingness I
certainly did receive from the Virginian, only not a word of fellowship. He
harnessed the horses, got my trunk, and gave me some advice about taking
provisions for our journey, something more palatable than what food we should
find along the road. It was well thought of, and I bought quite a parcel of
dainties, feeling that he would despise both them and me. And thus I took my
seat beside him, wondering what we should manage to talk about for two hundred
and sixty-three miles.
Farewell in those days was not said in Cattle Land. Acquaintances watched our
departure with a nod or with nothing, and the nearest approach to "Good-by" was
the proprietor's "So-long." But I caught sight of one farewell given without
words.
As we drove by the eating-house, the shade of a side window was raised, and
the landlady looked her last upon the Virginian. Her lips were faintly parted,
and no woman's eyes ever said more plainly, "I am one of your possessions." She
had forgotten that it might be seen. Her glance caught mine, and she backed into
the dimness of the room. What look she may have received from him, if he gave
her any at this too public moment, I could not tell. His eyes seemed to be upon
the horses, and he drove with the same mastering ease that had roped the wild
pony yesterday. We passed the ramparts of Medicine Bow,—thick heaps and fringes
of tin cans, and shelving mounds of bottles cast out of the saloons. The sun
struck these at a hundred glittering points. And in a moment we were in the
clean plains, with the prairie-dogs and the pale herds of antelope. The great,
still air bathed us, pure as water and strong as wine; the sunlight flooded the
world; and shining upon the breast of the Virginian's flannel shirt lay a long
gold thread of hair! The noisy American drummer had met defeat, but this silent
free lance had been easily victorious.
It must have been five miles that we travelled in silence, losing and seeing
the horizon among the ceaseless waves of the earth. Then I looked back, and
there was Medicine Bow, seemingly a stone's throw behind us. It was a full
half-hour before I looked back again, and there sure enough was always Medicine
Bow. A size or two smaller, I will admit, but visible in every feature, like
something seen through the wrong end of a field glass. The East-bound express
was approaching the town, and I noticed the white steam from its whistle; but
when the sound reached us, the train had almost stopped. And in reply to my
comment upon this, the Virginian deigned to remark that it was more so in
Arizona.
"A man come to Arizona," he said, "with one of them telescopes to study the
heavenly bodies. He was a Yankee, seh, and a right smart one, too. And one night
we was watchin' for some little old fallin' stars that he said was due, and I
saw some lights movin' along across the mesa pretty lively, an' I sang out. But
he told me it was just the train. And I told him I didn't know yu' could see the
cyars that plain from his place, 'Yu' can see them,' he said to me, 'but it is
las' night's cyars you're lookin' at.'" At this point the Virginian spoke
severely to one of the horses. "Of course," he then resumed to me, "that Yankee
man did not mean quite all he said.—You, Buck!" he again broke off suddenly to
the horse. "But Arizona, seh," he continued, "it cert'nly has a mos' deceivin'
atmospheah. Another man told me he had seen a lady close one eye at him when he
was two minutes hard run from her." This time the Virginian gave Buck the whip.
"What effect," I inquired with a gravity equal to his own, "does this
extraordinary foreshortening have upon a quart of whiskey?"
"When it's outside yu', seh, no distance looks too far to go to it."
He glanced at me with an eye that held more confidence than hitherto he had
been able to feel in me. I had made one step in his approval. But I had many yet
to go. This day he preferred his own thoughts to my conversation, and so he did
all the days of this first journey; while I should have greatly preferred his
conversation to my thoughts. He dismissed some attempts that I made upon the
subject of Uncle Hughey so that I had not the courage to touch upon Trampas, and
that chill brief collision which might have struck the spark of death. Trampas!
I had forgotten him till this silent drive I was beginning. I wondered if I
should ever see him, or Steve, or any of those people again. And this wonder I
expressed aloud.
"There's no tellin' in this country," said the Virginian. "Folks come easy,
and they go easy. In settled places, like back in the States, even a poor man
mostly has a home. Don't care if it's only a barrel on a lot, the fello' will
keep frequentin' that lot, and if yu' want him yu' can find him. But out hyeh in
the sage-brush, a man's home is apt to be his saddle blanket. First thing yu'
know, he has moved it to Texas."
"You have done some moving yourself," I suggested.
But this word closed his mouth. "I have had a look at the country," he said,
and we were silent again. Let me, however, tell you here that he had set out for
a "look at the country" at the age of fourteen; and that by his present age of
twenty-four he had seen Arkansas, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California,
Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. Everywhere he had taken care of himself,
and survived; nor had his strong heart yet waked up to any hunger for a home.
Let me also tell you that he was one of thousands drifting and living thus, but
(as you shall learn) one in a thousand.
Medicine Bow did not forever remain in sight. When next I thought of it and
looked behind, nothing was there but the road we had come; it lay like a ship's
wake across the huge ground swell of the earth. We were swallowed in a vast
solitude. A little while before sunset, a cabin came in view; and here we passed
our first night. Two young men lived here, tending their cattle. They were fond
of animals. By the stable a chained coyote rushed nervously in a circle, or sat
on its haunches and snapped at gifts of food ungraciously. A tame young elk
walked in and out of the cabin door, and during supper it tried to push me off
my chair. A half-tame mountain sheep practised jumping from the ground to the
roof. The cabin was papered with posters of a circus, and skins of bear and
silver fox lay upon the floor. Until nine o'clock one man talked to the
Virginian, and one played gayly upon a concertina; and then we all went to bed.
The air was like December, but in my blankets and a buffalo robe I kept warm,
and luxuriated in the Rocky Mountain silence. Going to wash before breakfast at
sunrise, I found needles of ice in a pail. Yet it was hard to remember that this
quiet, open, splendid wilderness (with not a peak in sight just here) was six
thousand feet high. And when breakfast was over there was no December left; and
by the time the Virginian and I were ten miles upon our way, it was June. But
always every breath that I breathed was pure as water and strong as wine.
We never passed a human being this day. Some wild cattle rushed up to us and
away from us; antelope stared at us from a hundred yards; coyotes ran skulking
through the sage-brush to watch us from a hill; at our noon meal we killed a
rattlesnake and shot some young sage chickens, which were good at supper,
roasted at our camp-fire.
By half-past eight we were asleep beneath the stars, and by half-past four I
was drinking coffee and shivering. The horse, Buck, was hard to catch this
second morning. Whether some hills that we were now in had excited him, or
whether the better water up here had caused an effervescence in his spirits, I
cannot say. But I was as hot as July by the time we had him safe in harness, or,
rather, unsafe in harness. For Buck, in the mysterious language of horses, now
taught wickedness to his side partner, and about eleven o'clock they laid their
evil heads together and decided to break our necks.
We were passing, I have said, through a range of demi-mountains. It was a
little country where trees grew, water ran, and the plains were shut out for a
while. The road had steep places in it, and places here and there where you
could fall off and go bounding to the bottom among stones. But Buck, for some
reason, did not think these opportunities good enough for him. He selected a
more theatrical moment. We emerged from a narrow canyon suddenly upon five
hundred cattle and some cow-boys branding calves by a fire in a corral. It was a
sight that Buck knew by heart. He instantly treated it like an appalling
phenomenon. I saw him kick seven ways; I saw Muggins kick five ways; our furious
motion snapped my spine like a whip. I grasped the seat. Something gave a
forlorn jingle. It was the brake.
"Don't jump!" commanded the trustworthy man.
"No," I said, as my hat flew off.
Help was too far away to do anything for us. We passed scathless through a
part of the cattle, I saw their horns and backs go by. Some earth crumbled, and
we plunged downward into water rocking among stones, and upward again through
some more crumbling earth. I heard a crash, and saw my trunk landing in the
stream.
"She's safer there," said the trustworthy man.
"True," I said.
"We'll go back for her," said he, with his eye on the horses and his foot on
the crippled brake. A dry gully was coming, and no room to turn. The farther
side of it was terraced with rock. We should simply fall backward, if we did not
fall forward first. He steered the horses straight over, and just at the bottom
swung them, with astonishing skill, to the right along the hard-baked mud. They
took us along the bed up to the head of the gully, and through a thicket of
quaking asps. The light trees bent beneath our charge and bastinadoed the wagon
as it went over them. But their branches enmeshed the horses' legs, and we came
to a harmless standstill among a bower of leaves.
I looked at the trustworthy man, and smiled vaguely. He considered me for a
moment.
"I reckon," said he, "you're feelin' about halfway between 'Oh, Lord!' and
'Thank God!'"
"That's quite it," said I, as he got down on the ground.
"Nothing's broke," said he, after a searching examination. And he indulged in
a true Virginian expletive. "Gentlemen, hush!" he murmured gently, looking at me
with his grave eyes; "one time I got pretty near scared. You, Buck," he
continued, "some folks would beat you now till yu'd be uncertain whether yu' was
a hawss or a railroad accident. I'd do it myself, only it wouldn't cure yu'."
I now told him that I supposed he had saved both our lives. But he detested
words of direct praise. He made some grumbling rejoinder, and led the horses out
of the thicket. Buck, he explained to me, was a good horse, and so was Muggins.
Both of them generally meant well, and that was the Judge's reason for sending
them to meet me. But these broncos had their off days. Off days might not come
very often; but when the humor seized a bronco, he had to have his spree. Buck
would now behave himself as a horse should for probably two months. "They are
just like humans," the Virginian concluded.
Several cow-boys arrived on a gallop to find how many pieces of us were left.
We returned down the hill; and when we reached my trunk, it was surprising to
see the distance that our runaway had covered. My hat was also found, and we
continued on our way.
Buck and Muggins were patterns of discretion through the rest of the
mountains. I thought when we camped this night that it was strange Buck should
be again allowed to graze at large, instead of being tied to a rope while we
slept. But this was my ignorance. With the hard work that he was gallantly
doing, the horse needed more pasture than a rope's length would permit him to
find. Therefore he went free, and in the morning gave us but little trouble in
catching him.
We crossed a river in the forenoon, and far to the north of us we saw the Bow
Leg Mountains, pale in the bright sun. Sunk Creek flowed from their western
side, and our two hundred and sixty-three miles began to grow a small thing in
my eyes. Buck and Muggins, I think, knew perfectly that to-morrow would see them
home. They recognized this region; and once they turned off at a fork in the
road. The Virginian pulled them back rather sharply.
"Want to go back to Balaam's?" he inquired of them. "I thought you had more
sense."
I asked, "Who was Balaam?"
"A maltreater of hawsses," replied the cowpuncher. "His ranch is on Butte
Creek oveh yondeh." And he pointed to where the diverging road melted into
space. "The Judge bought Buck and Muggins from him in the spring."
"So he maltreats horses?" I repeated.
"That's the word all through this country. A man that will do what they claim
Balaam does to a hawss when he's mad, ain't fit to be called human." The
Virginian told me some particulars.
"Oh!" I almost screamed at the horror of it, and again, "Oh!"
"He'd have prob'ly done that to Buck as soon as he stopped runnin' away. If I
caught a man doin' that—"
We were interrupted by a sedate-looking traveller riding upon an equally
sober horse.
"Mawnin', Taylor," said the Virginian, pulling up for gossip. "Ain't you
strayed off your range pretty far?"
"You're a nice one!" replied Mr. Taylor, stopping his horse and smiling
amiably.
"Tell me something I don't know," retorted the Virginian.
"Hold up a man at cards and rob him," pursued Mr. Taylor. "Oh, the news has
got ahead of you!"
"Trampas has been hyeh explainin', has he?" said the Virginian with a grin.
"Was that your victim's name?" said Mr. Taylor, facetiously. "No, it wasn't
him that brought the news. Say, what did you do, anyway?"
"So that thing has got around," murmured the Virginian. "Well, it wasn't
worth such wide repawtin'." And he gave the simple facts to Taylor, while I sat
wondering at the contagious powers of Rumor. Here, through this voiceless land,
this desert, this vacuum, it had spread like a change of weather. "Any news up
your way?" the Virginian concluded.
Importance came into Mr. Taylor's countenance. "Bear Creek is going to build
a schoolhouse," said he.
"Goodness gracious!" drawled the Virginian. "What's that for?"
Now Mr. Taylor had been married for some years. "To educate the offspring of
Bear Creek," he answered with pride.
"Offspring of Bear Creek," the Virginian meditatively repeated. "I don't
remember noticin' much offspring. There was some white tail deer, and a right
smart o' jack rabbits."
"The Swintons have moved up from Drybone," said Mr. Taylor, always seriously.
"They found it no place for young children. And there's Uncle Carmody with six,
and Ben Dow. And Westfall has become a family man, and—"
"Jim Westfall!" exclaimed the Virginian. "Him a fam'ly man! Well, if this
hyeh Territory is goin' to get full o' fam'ly men and empty o' game, I believe
I'll—"
"Get married yourself," suggested Mr. Taylor.
"Me! I ain't near reached the marriageable age. No, seh! But Uncle Hughey has
got there at last, yu' know."
"Uncle Hughey!" shouted Mr. Taylor. He had not heard this. Rumor is very
capricious. Therefore the Virginian told him, and the family man rocked in his
saddle.
"Build your schoolhouse," said the Virginian. "Uncle Hughey has qualified
himself to subscribe to all such propositions. Got your eye on a schoolmarm?"