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Sandburrs and Others
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Sandburrs and Others

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Sandburrs and Others

Enright, who has finished replenishing the pistol from which he evicted the loads, draws a chair to a monte table and drums gently with his fingers.

“The meetin’ will please bed itse’f down!” says Enright, with a sage dignity which has generous reflection in the faces around him. “Doc Peets, gents, who is a sport whom we all knows an’ respects, will now state the object of this round-up. The barkeep meanwhile will please continue his rounds, the same not bein’ deemed disturbin’; none whatever.”

“Gents, an’ fellow townsmen!” says Doc Peets, rising at the call of Enright and stepping forward, “I avoids all harassin’ mention of a yeretofore sort. Comin’ down to the turn at once, I ventures the remark that thar’s somethin’ wrong with Wolfville. I would see no virtue in pursooin’ this subject, which might well excite the resentment of all true citizens of the town, was it not that I feels a crowdin’ necessity for a change of a radical sort. Somethin’ must be proposed, an’ somethin’ must be did. I am well aware thar’s gents yere to-day as holds a conviction that a bet is overlooked in not stringin’ the Mexican last week on account of the party from Denver. That may or may not be true; but in any event, that hand’s been played, an’ that pot’s been lost an’ won. Whether on that occasion we diskyards an’ draws for the best interests of the public, may well pass by onasked. At any rate we don’t fill, an’ the Greaser wins out with his neck. Lettin’ the past, tharfore, drift for a moment, I would like to hear from any gent present somethin’ in the line of a proposal for future action; one calc’lated to do Wolfville proud. As affairs stand our pride is goin’ our brotherly love is goin’, our public sperit is goin’, an’ the way we’re p’intin’ out, onless we comes squar’ about on the trail, we won’t be no improvement on an outfit of Digger Injuns in a month. Gents, I pauses at this p’int for su’gestions.”

As Doc Peets sits down a whispered buzz runs through the room. It is plain that what he has said finds sympathy in his audience.

“You’ve heard Peets,” observes Enright, beating softly. “Any party with views should not withhold ‘em. I takes it we-all is anxious for the good of Wolfville. We should proceed with wisdom. Red Dog, our tinhorn rival, is a-watchin’ of this camp, ready to detect an’ take advantages of any weakenin’ of sperit on the Wolfville part. So far Red Dog has been out-lucked, out-played, an’ out-held. Wolfville has downed her on the deal, an’ on the draw. But, to continue in the future as in the past, requires to-day that we acts promptly, an’ in yoonison, an’ give the sitooation, mentally speakin’, the best turn in the box.”

“What for a play would it be?” asks Dan Boggs, doubtfully, as he rises and bows stiffly to Enright, who bows stiffly in return; “whatever for a play would it be to rope up one of these yere lecture sharps, which the same I goes ag’inst the other night in Tucson? He could stampede over an’ put us up a talk in the warehouse of the New York Store; an’ I’m right yere to say a lecture would look mighty meetropolitan, that a-way, an’ lay over Red Dog like four kings an’ an ace.”

“Whatever was this yere ghost dancer you adverts to lecturin’ about?” asks Jack Moore.

“I never do hear the first of it,” replies Boggs. “Me an’ Old Monte, the stage driver, is projectin’ about Tucson at the time we strikes this lecture game, an* it’s about half dealt out when he gets in on it. But as far as we keeps tabs, he’s talkin’ about Roosia an’ Siberia, an’ how they were pesterin’ an’ playin’ it low on the Jews. He has a lay-out of maps an’ sech, an’ packs the whole racket with him from deal box to check-rack. Folks as sabes lectures allows he turns as strong a game, with as high a limit, as any sport that ever charged four bits for a back seat. The lecture sharp’s all right; the question is do you-alls deem highly of the scheme? If it’s the sense of this yere town, it don’t take two days to cut this short-horn out of the Tucson herd an’ drive him over yere.

“Onder other, an’ what one might call a more concrete condition of public feelin’,” says Doc Peets, cutting rapidly and diplomatically into the talk, “the hint of our esteemed townsman would be accepted on the instant. But to my mind this yere camp ain’t in no proper frame of mind for lectures on Roosia. It’ll be full of trouble, – sech a talk. I sabes Roosia as well as I does an ace. Thar’s an old silver tip they calls the Czar, which is their language for a sort o’ national chief of scouts, an’ he’s always trackin’ ‘round for trouble. Thar’s bound to be no end of what you might call turmoil in a lecture on Roosia, and the sensibilities of Wolfville, already harrowed, ain’t in no shape to bear it. Now, while friend Boggs has been talkin’, my idees has followed off a different waggon track. What we-all needs, is not so much a lecture, which is for a day, but somethin’ lastin’, sech as the example of a refined an’ elevated home life abidin’ in our very midst. What Wolfville pines for is the mollifyin’ inflooence of woman. Shorely we has Faro Nell! who is pleasantly present with us, a-settin’ back thar alongside Cherokee Hall; an’ that gent never makes a moccasin track in Wolfville who don’t prize an’ value Nell. Thar ain’t a six-shooter in camp but what would bark itse’f hoarse in her behalf. But Nell’s young; merely a yearlin’ as it were. What we wants is the picture of a happy household where the feminine part tharof, in the triple capacity of woman, wife an’ mother, while cherishin’ an’ carin’ for her husband, sheds likewise a radiant inflooence for us.”

“Whoopee! for Doc Peets!” shouts Faro Nell, flourishing her broad sombrero over her young curls.

“Pausin’ only to thank our fair young townswoman,” says Doc Peets, bowing gallantly to Faro Nell, who waves her hand in return, “for her endorsements, which the same is as flatterin’ as it is priceless, I stampedes on to say that I learns from first sources, indeed from the gent himse’f, that one of the worthiest citizens of Wolfville, Mr. Killifer, who is on the map as blacksmith at the stage station, has a wife in the states. I would recommend that Mr. Killifer be requested to bring on this esteemable lady to keep camp for him. The O. K. Restaurant will lose a customer, the same bein’ the joint where Kif gets his daily con-carne; but Rucker, the landlord, will not repine for that. What will be Rucker’s loss will be general gain, an’ for the welfare of Wolfville, Rucker makes a sacrifice. Mr. Chairman, my su’gestion takes the form of a motion.”

“Which said motion,” responds Enright, with such vigorous application of his fist to the purpose of a gavel that nervous spirits might well fear for the results, “which said motion, onless I hears a protest, goes as it lays. Thar bein’ no objection the chair declares it to be the commands of Wolfville that Syd Killifer bring on his wife. What heaven has j’ined together, let no gent – ”

“See yere, Mr. Chairman!” interposes Killifer, with a mixture of decision and diffidence, “I merely interferes to ask whether, as the he’pless victim of this on-looked for uprisin’, do my feelin’s count? Which if I ain’t in this – if it’s regarded as the correct caper to lay waste the future of a gent, who in his lowly way is doin’ his best to make good his hand, why! I ain’t got nothin’ to say. I’m impugnin’ no gent’s motives, but I’m free to remark, these yere proceeding strikes me as the froote of reckless caprice.”

“I will say to our fellow gent,” says Enright with much dignity, “that thar’s no disp’sition to force a play to which he seems averse. If from any knowledge we s’posed we entertained of the possession of a sperit on his part, which might rise to the aid of a general need – I shorely hopes I makes my meanin’ plain – we over-deals the kyards, all we can do is to throw our hands in the diskyard an’ shuffle an’ deal ag’in.”

“Not at all, an’ no offence given, took or meant!” hastily retorts Killifer, as he balances himself uneasily upon his feet, and surveys first, Enright and then Peets. “I has the highest regard for the chair, personal, an’ takes frequent occasion to remark that I looks on Doc Peets as the best eddicated scientist I ever sees in my life. But this yere surge into my domestic arrangements needs to be considered. You-alls don’t know the lady in question, which, bein’ as it’s my wife, I ain’t assoomin’ no airs when I says I does.”

“Does she look like me, Kif?” asks Faro Nell from her perch near Cherokee Hall.

“None whatever, Nell!” responds Killifer. “To be shore! I ain’t basked none in her society for several years, an’ my mem’ry is no doubt blurred by stampedes, an’ prairie fires, an’ cyclones, an’ lynchin’s, an’ other features of a frontier career; but she puts me in mind, as I recalls the lady, of an Injun uprisin’ more’n anythin’ else. Still, she’s as good a woman as ever founds a flap-jack. But she’s haughty; that’s what she is, she’s haughty.

“I might add,” goes on Killifer, in a deprecatory way, “that inasmuch as I ain’t jest lookin’ for the camp yere to turn to me in its hour of need, this proposal to transplant the person onder discussion to Wolfville, is an honour as onexpected as a rattlesnake in a roll of blankets. But you-alls knows me!” – And here Killifer braces himself desperately. – “What the camp says, goes! I’m a vox populi sort of sport, an’ the last citizen to lay down on a duty. Still!” – here Killifer’s courage begins to ebb a little – “I advises we go about this yere enterprise mighty conserv’tive. My wife has her notions, an’ now I thinks of it she ain’t likely to esteem none high neither of our Wolfville ways. All I can say, gents, is that if she takes a notion ag’in us, she’s as liable to break even as any lady I knows.”

“Thar ain’t a gent here but what honours Kif,” says the sanguine Peets, as he looks encouragingly at Killifer, who has resumed his seat and is gloomily shaking his head, “for bein’ frank an’ free in this.”

“Which I don’t want you-alls to spread your blankets on no ant-hill, an’ then blame me!” interrupts Killifer dejectedly.

“I believe, Mr. Chairman,” continues Doc Peets, “we fully onderstands the feelin’s of our townsman in this matter. But I’m convinced of the correctness of my first view. Thar can shorely be nothin’ in the daily life of Wolfville at which the lady could aim a criticism, an’ we needs the beneficent example of a home. I would tharfore insist on my plan with perhaps a modification.”

“I rises to ask the Preesidin’ Officer a question!” interrupts Dave Tutt.

“Let her roll!” retorts Enright.

“How would it be to invite Kif’s wife to come yere on a visit?” queries Tutt. “Sorter take her on probation! That’s the way an oncle of mine back in Missouri j’ines the Meth’dist Church. An’ it’s lucky the congregation takes them precautions; which they saves the trouble of cuttin’ the old felon out of the herd later, when he falls from grace. Which last he shorely does!”

“Not waitin’ for the chair to answer,” replies Doc Peets, “I holds the limitation of Tutt to be good. I tharfore pinches down my original resolootion to the effect that Kif bring his wife yere for a month. Let her stack up ag’inst our daily game, an’ triumph through a deal or so, an’ she’ll never quit Wolfville nor Wolfville her. I shorely holds the present occasion the openin’ of a new era.”

It is a month later, perhaps, when everybody assembles at the post-office to receive the lady on whom the local public has built so many hopes. Killifer has gone over to Tucson to act as her escort into Wolfville, and, as he said, “to sorter break the effect.”

She is an iron-visaged heroine. As Killifer hands her from the stage – a ceremony upon which he bestows that delicate care wherewith he would have aided the unloading of so much dynamite – Doc Peets steps gallantly forward, raising his hat. Doc Peets is the proprietor of the only stiff hat in town, and presumes on it.

“Who is that insultin’ drunkard, Mr. Killifer?” demands the lady, as she bends her eyes on the suave Peets, with such point-blank wrath that it silences the salutation on Peets’ lips; “no friend of your’n I hope?”

“Which I says it in confidence,” remarks Old Monte, as an hour later he refreshes himself at the bar of the Red Light, “for I holds it onprofessional to go blowin’ the private affairs of my passengers, but I shorely thinks the old grizzly gives Kif a clawin’ on the way over. I hears him yell like a wolf back in Long’s canyon. To be shore! he’s inside an’ I can’t see, but I’m offerin’ two to one up to $100 she was lickin’ him; if I don’t I’m a Siwash!”

It turns out as Killifer predicted. He read the lady aright. There is nothing in Wolfville to which she yields approval. It would be as impossible as it would be terrific, to repeat in print the conduct of this remarkable woman. She utterly abashes Enright; while such hare-hearts as Jack Moore, Cherokee Hall, Dave Tutt, Texas Thompson, Short Creek Dave and Dan Boggs, fly from her like quicksilver. Even Doc Peets acknowledges himself defeated and put to naught. The least of her feats is the invasion of a peaceful poker game to which Killifer is party, and the sweeping confiscation of every dollar in the bank on claim that it is money ravished from Killifer by venal practices. The mildest of her plans is one to assail the Red Light with an axe, should she ever detect the odour of whiskey about Killifer again.

“An’ do you know, Doc!” observes Enright, a fortnight later, as they meet for their midday drink, “the boys sorter lays it on you. You know me, Doc! I’ll stand up ag’in the iron for you; but as a squar’ man, with a fairly balanced mind, I’m bound to admit the boys is right. Now I don’t say they feels resentful; it’s more like they was mournful over what used to be, an’ a day of peace gone by. But you knows what people be whose burdens is more’n they can bear; an’ if I was you, this yere lady or I would leave the camp. I’m the last gent to go dictatin’ about the details of another gent’s game; but you an’ me, Doc, has been old friends, an’ as a warnin’ from a source which means you well, I gives it to you cold the camp is gettin’ hostile.”

It is always a spectacle to inspire, to witness a great soul rise to an occasion. Doc Peets never so proves the power of his nature as now, when the tremendous shadow of “Kif’s wife” has fallen across Wolfville like a blight. Peets, following Enright’s forebodings, holds a long and secret conference with the unhappy Killifer. That night Peets rides to Tucson. The next day Old Monte, with his six horses a-foam, comes crashing into Wolfville two hours ahead of schedule. Before even a mail bag is thrown off, Old Monte unpouches a telegram received at the Tucson office for Mistress Killifer. Its earmark is Illinois; its contents moving. No matter what it tells, its news is cogent enough to decide the lady’s mind.

The next morning this dread woman departs, leaving, as she came, with a withering look at all around. That night Killifer gets drunk. Wolfville not only pardons Killifer in his weakness; it joins him.

“But you suppresses the facts, Kif, when you says she’s haughty,” observes Dan Boggs. “Haughty, as a deescription, ain’t a six-spot!”

“It’s with no purpose, Kif,” says Doc Peets, as he fills his glass, “to discourage you – whom I sympathises with as an onfortunate, an’ respects as a dead game gent – that I yereby invites the pop’lation to join me in a drink of congratulation on Wolfville’s escape from your wife. An’ all informal though this assemblage be, I offers a resolootion that this, the 23d of August, the date when the lady in question pulls her freight, be an’ remain forevermore a day of yearly thanksgivin’ to Wolfville.”

“Which I libates to that myse’f!” says Killifer as he drains his cup to the last lingering drop. “Also I trusts this camp will proceed with caution the next time it turns in to play my domestic hand.”

BEARS

Bears are peaceful folk. They are a mild and lowly citizenry of the woods – I’m talking of the black sort – and shuffle modestly away the moment they hear you coming. We get many of our impressions of the ferocity of animals and the deadly poisons of reptiles from an unworthy sort of hearsay evidence. Much of it comes from Mexicans and Indians rather than from real experience. Now I wouldn’t traduce either the Mexicans or the Indians, for their lot is one of hard, sodden ignorance; but it must be conceded that they’re by no means careful historians, and run readily to tales of the marvellous and the tragic. I am going back to a bear story I have in mind before I get through; but I want to interject here, while I think of it, that though the centipede, the rattlesnake, the tarantula and the Gila monster, have bitter repute as able to deal death with their poisonous feet or fangs, I was never, in my years on the plains and in the mountains, able to secure proof of even the shallowest sort that a death, whether of man or animal, had ever resulted from the sting of any one of these. On the other hand, I have been with men who were bitten by rattlesnakes, or stung by tarantulas; or who while asleep had suffered as the inadvertent promenade of a centipede, with its hundred hooked, poison-exuding feet; but none of them died. They were sick in an out-of-sort, headache fashion for a day or two; the bitten place inflamed and was sore for a week or a month; that was all. I suppose I’ve known of fully one hundred horses, cows and sheep which were bitten by rattlesnakes; none died. They were invariably fanged in the nose, too, as they grazed towards my lord of the rattlers. On more than one occasion I kept the animal so bitten in sight to note results. Its head would swell and puff; it would lounge about with a sick listlessness for several days; then the poison would wear away in force, and back to its grass it would go with the wire-edge appetite of a sailor home from sea.

But about bears. I was remarking that my black, shaggy cousins of the woods were a peaceful folk. So much is this true, and so little do their neighbours apprehend violence at their clumsy hands, that they who live in regions which abound in bears evince not the least alarm about the safety of their children. The babies, some as young as five or six years, roam the same mountains with the bears; and, while the latter will swoop upon a pig and run dangers with wide-open eyes in doing it, never did I hear of one who disturbed a ringlet on a child’s head. They had daily opportunities enough, for many are the households to live in the wide, pine-sown Rockies.

Our bears, too, are creatures of vast physical power. Often, as I rode the mountain for cattle, have I come across a dead and fallen pine tree, which would have defeated the best efforts of a horse to move, completely torn from its bed in the earth and leaves, and either overturned or thrown one side by the mighty arms of a bear. He was in search of a dinner cf grubs – those white, helpless worms which make their dull homes under rotten logs – and Sir Bear made no more ado of lifting and laying aside a pine tree in his grub-hunt than would you or I of a billet of firewood.

While in the mountains I marvelled over the fact that the bears and the mountain lions never assailed the young calves. The hills were rife with cattle, and every spring found the canyons and oak-bushed slopes a perfect nursery of calves. And yet neither the panthers nor the bears disturbed them. It was due, I think, more to the bellicose character of the old cow and her relatives, than any uprightness of character on the part of the bears, and the panthers. Let a calf raise but one yell of distress in those mountains – and I assure you he can make their walls and valleys ring with his youthful music when so disposed – and, out of canyons and off mesas, over logs and crashing through the oak bushes, will come plunging all the cattle within hearing. Not thirty seconds will elapse before as many cattle will be by the side of the threatened calf, lusting for battle. They make such a phalanx of sharp, threatening horns, coupled with their rolling, wrath-red eyes and ferocious breathings, that, I warrant you, they have so shocked the nerves of past bears and panthers, it has become instinct with these latter to give the whole horned, truculent brood a wide berth.

The Indians are very fond of the bear for his wisdom, and he divides their respect with the beaver as a personage of sagacity. The curiosity of my shaggy friend would shame any boy or girl of ten. You may be sure, were a bear to visit you for a week at your home, he would open every door, ransack every bureau, take every garment off every hook in every closet – and I had almost said “try it on” – before he had been with you an hour. Not a box nor a barrel, not a nook nor cranny, from cellar to ridge pole, would escape his investigation. His black nose would sniff at every crack, his black hand explore every crevice. Nor, beyond what he bestowed in his remorseless stomach, would he destroy anything. I have the black coat of a bear at my house, who might be wearing it himself to-day, were it not for his curiosity.

There was a salt spring near my camp on the upper Red River; perhaps two miles away, which is “near” in the mountains. This salt spring was popular with the deer. They repaired thither to lick the salt earth about the waters. I had, among the lumber at my camp, a big, two-spring trap of steel; I suppose it must have weighed sixty pounds. It occurred to me that a lazy way to kill a deer would be to set this wide-jawed engine near the spring and let one walk into it. I’m not proud of this plan as a method in deer-killing, and wouldn’t do it now. On this occasion, however I was not particular. I “set” the trap at my camp – for I had to use a hand-spike to crush down the springs, and it all gave me a deal of work and trouble – and then, with its jaws wide open, but held so that it wouldn’t nip me in case it did snap, I crept carefully aboard my pony and rode over to the spring. The next morning early I had to go again to remove the trap, as during the day the cattle would take the places of the deer at this delectable salt spring, and I didn’t care to break the legs of a thirty-dollar steer with my trapping. I went over while it was yet dark, and found no deer in the trap. I took it and hid it, face downward – the jaws still spread and “set” – by the of a big yellow pine log, which stretched its decayed length along the slope of the canyon. There I left it, intending to return and rearrange it for deer at dusk.

It snowed that day, and as I grew lazy towards night, I left my trap where I’d hidden it by the yellow pine log. The deer would have one night of safety. What was safety for the deer proved otherwise for the bear.

The following day I rode over just as the canyons were getting dark and the cattle climbing out of them to pass the night on the hills. Behold! my trap was gone!

There was a great flourish of tracks in the snow; long plantigrade impressions like the bare footprints of some giant! I knew that a bear had somehow acquired my trap, or the trap, him; at that time I couldn’t tell which. To make it short, however, it came to this: The bear, scouting in a loaferish way down the hill, and pausing no doubt to make an estimate of the probable grubs he would find beneath this particular yellow pine next summer, had chanced upon the trap. Here was a great find. Thoughts of grubs and common edible things at once deserted him. The mysterious novelty he had found took possession of his addle-pate like a new toy. A wolf or a fox would have smelled the odour of my handling, even off the cold steel of the trap, and been over the hills and far away in a twinkling. Your wolf is the canniest of timber folk; a grey Scotchman of the mountains. But my bear was reared on a different bottle. He sat down at once and actually took the new plaything in his lap. Then it would seem as if he deliberately thrust his paw into it and sprung its savage jaws on his forearm.

In his first wrathful surprise, my bear tore up the snow and bushes for twenty feet about; but at last he set off with the trap on his foot.

It was late. For half an hour I followed the broad track where his bearship had dragged the trap in the snow at a gallop. It was dark when at last I turned off for camp. Bright and betimes, I took the trail next day. It carried me over some ten miles of rough, close country. About midday I stood on the bluff edge of the Canyon Caliente, picking a pathway with my eyes along its steep, perilous side for my pony to get down. The bear had crossed here; but he was in the roughest of moods, and seemingly made no more of hurling himself over twenty-foot precipices – himself and my trap – or sublimely sliding down dangerous descents of hundreds of feet where foothold was impossible, than you would of eating buttered buns. So I had to pick out paths for myself; I couldn’t trust to so reckless and uncivil an engineer as my bear.

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