Dorn Of The Mountains (12 page)

BOOK: Dorn Of The Mountains
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It was a verdant valley, deep-set in mountain walls, wild and sad and lonesome. The waterfall dominated the spirit of the place, dreamy and sleepy and tranquil, and it murmured sweetly in one breath of wind, and lulled with another, and sometimes died out altogether, only to come again in soft strange roar.

“Paradise Park,” whispered Bo to herself.

A call from Dorn disturbed their raptures. Turning, they hobbled with eager but painful steps in the direction of a larger campfire, situated to the right of the great rock that sheltered their lean-to. No hut or house showed there and none was needed. Hiding places and homes for 100 hunters were there in the sections of caverned cliffs, split off in bygone ages from the mountain wall above. A few stately pines stood out from the rocks, and a clump of silver spruces ran down to a brown brook. This camp was only a step from the lean-to, around the corner of a huge rock, yet it had been out of sight. Here indeed was evidence of a hunter’s home—pelts and skins and antlers, a neat pile of split firewood, a long ledge of rock, well-sheltered, and loaded with bags like a huge pantry shelf, packs and ropes and saddles, tools and weapons, and a platform of dry brush as shelter for a fire around which hung on poles a various assortment of utensils for camp.

“Hyar…you git!” shouted Dorn, and he threw a stick at something. A bear cub scampered away in haste. He was small and woolly and brown, and he grunted as he ran. Soon he halted.

“That’s Bud,” said Dorn as the girls came up. “Guess he near starved in my absence. An’ now he wants everythin’, especially the sugar. We don’t have sugar often up here.”

“Isn’t he dear? Oh, I love him!” cried Bo. “Come back, Bud. Come, Buddie.”

The cub, however, kept his distance, watching Dorn with bright little eyes.

“Where’s Mister Roy?” asked Helen.

“Roy’s gone. He was sorry not to say good bye. But it’s important he gets down in the pines on Anson’s trail. He’ll hang to Anson, an’, in case they get near Pine, he’ll ride in to see where your uncle is.”

“What do you expect?” questioned Helen gravely.

“Most anythin’,” he replied. “Al, I reckon, knows now. Maybe he’s rustlin’ into the mountains by this time. If he meets up with Anson, well an’ good, for Roy won’t be far off. An’ sure if he runs across Roy, why they’ll soon be here. But, if I were you, I wouldn’t count on seein’ your uncle very soon. I’m sorry. I’ve done my best. It sure is a bad deal.”

“Don’t think me ungracious,” replied Helen hastily. How plainly he had intimated that it must be privation and annoyance for her to be compelled to accept his hospitality. “You are good…kind. I owe you much. I’ll be eternally grateful.”

Dorn straightened as he looked at her. His glance was intent, piercing. He seemed to be receiving a strange or unusual portent. No need for him to say he had never before been spoken to like that.

“You may have to stay here with me…for weeks…maybe months…if we’ve the bad luck to get snowed in,” he said slowly, as if startled at this deduction. “You’re safe here. No sheep thief could ever find this camp. I’ll take risks to get you safe into Al’s hands. But I’m goin’ to be pretty sure about what I’m doin’…. So…there’s plenty to eat an’ it’s a pretty place.”

“Pretty! Why, it’s grand!” exclaimed Bo. “I’ve called it Paradise Park.”

“Paradise Park,” he repeated, weighing the words. “You’ve named it an’ also the creek. Paradise Creek! I’ve been here twelve years with no fit name for my home till you said that.”

“Oh, that pleases me,” returned Bo, with shining eyes.

“Eat now,” said Dorn. “An’ I reckon you’ll like that turkey.”

There was a clean tarpaulin upon which were spread steaming fragrant pans—roast turkey, hot biscuits and gravy, mashed potatoes as white as if prepared at home, stewed dried apples, and butter and coffee. This bounteous repast surprised and delighted the girls, and, when they had once tasted the roast wild turkey, then Milt Dorn had reason to blush at their encomiums.

“I hope…Uncle Al…doesn’t come…for a month,” declared Bo as she tried to get her breath. There was a brown spot on her nose and one in each cheek, suspiciously close to her mouth.

Dorn laughed. It was pleasant to hear him, for his laugh seemed unused and deep, as if it came from tranquil depths.

“Won’t you eat with us?” asked Helen.

“Reckon I will,” he said. “It’ll save time an’ hot grub tastes better.”

Quite an interval of silence ensued, which presently was broken by Dorn.

“Here comes Tom.”

Helen observed with a thrill that the cougar was magnificent, seen erect on all fours, approaching with slow sinuous grace. His color was tawny with spots of whitish gray. He had bowlegs, big and round and furry, and a huge head with great tawny eyes. No matter how tame he was said to be, he looked wild. Like a dog he walked right up and it so happened that he was directly behind Bo, within reach of her when she turned.

“Oh, Lord!” cried Bo, and up went both of her hands, in one of which was a huge piece of turkey. Tom took it, not viciously, but nevertheless with a
snap
that made Helen jump. As if by magic the turkey vanished. And Tom took a closer step toward Bo. Her expression of fright changed to consternation.

“He stole my turkey.”

“Tom, come here,” ordered Dorn sharply. The cougar glided around rather sheepishly. “Now lie down an’ behave.”

Tom crouched on all fours, his head resting on his paws, with his beautiful tawny eyes, light and piercing, fixed upon the hunter.

“Don’t grab,” said Dorn, holding out a piece of turkey. Whereupon Tom took it less voraciously.

As it happened the little bear cub saw this transaction, and he plainly indicated his opinion of the preference showed to Tom.

“Oh, the dear!” exclaimed Bo. “He means it’s not fair…. Come, Bud…come on.”

But Bud would not approach the group until called by Dorn. Then he scrambled to them with every manifestation of delight. Bo almost forgot her own needs in feeding him, and getting acquainted with him. Tom plainly showed his jealousy of Bud, and Bud likewise showed his fear of the great cat.

Helen could not believe the evidence of her eyes—that she was in the woods, calmly and hungrily partaking of sweet, wild-flavored meat—that a full-grown mountain lion lay on one side of her and a baby brown bear sat on the other—that a strange hunter, a man of the forest, there in his lonely and isolated fastness, appealed to the romance in her and interested her as no one else she had ever met.

When the wonderful meal was at last finished, Bo enticed the bear cub around to the camp of the girls, and there soon became great comrades with him. Helen, watching Bo play, was inclined to envy her. No matter where Bo was placed, she always got something out of it. She adapted herself. She who could have a good time with almost anyone or anything would find the hours sweet and fleeting in this beautiful park of wild wonders.

But merely objective actions—merely physical movements had never yet contented Helen. She could run and climb and ride and play with hearty and healthy abandon, but those things would not suffice long for her, and her mind needed food. Helen was a thinker. One reason she had desired to make her home in the West was that by taking up a life of the open, of action, she might think and dream and brood less. And here she was in the wild West, after the three most strenuously active days of her career, and still the same old giant revolved her mind and turned it upon herself and upon all she saw.

“What can I do?” she asked Bo almost helplessly.

“Why rest, you silly,” retorted Bo. “You walk like an old crippled woman with only one leg.”

Helen hoped the comparison was undeserved, but the advice was sound. The blankets spread out in the grass looked inviting and they felt comfortably warm in the sunshine. The breeze was slow, languorous, fragrant, and it brought the low
hum
of the murmuring waterfall, like a melody of bees. Helen made a pillow and lay down to rest. The green pine needles, so thin and fine in their crisscrossed network, showed clearly against the blue sky. She looked in vain for birds. Then her gaze went wonderingly to the lofty fringed rim of the great amphitheater, and, as she studied it, she began to grasp its remoteness, how far away it was in the rarified atmosphere. A black ea gle, sweeping along, looked of tiny size, and yet he was far under the heights above. How pleasant she fancied it to be up there. And drowsy fancy lulled her to sleep.

Helen slept all afternoon and, upon awakening toward sunset, found Bo curled beside her. Dorn had thoughtfully covered them with a blanket; also he had built a campfire. The air was growing keen and cold.

Later, when they had put on their coats and made comfortable seats beside the fire, Dorn came over, apparently to visit them.

“I reckon you can’t sleep all the time,” he said. “An’ bein’ city girls you’ll get lonesome.”

“Lonesome!” echoed Helen. The idea of her being lonesome here had not occurred to her.

“I’ve thought that all out,” went on Dorn as he sat down, Indian fashion, before the blaze. “It’s natural you’d find time drag up here, bein’ used to lots of people an’ goin’s on, an’ work, an’ all girls like.”

“I’d never be lonesome here,” replied Helen with her direct force.

Dorn did not betray surprise, but he showed that his mistake was something to ponder over.

“Excuse me,” he said presently, as his gray eyes held hers. “That’s how I had it. As I remember girls…an’ it doesn’t seem long since I left home…most of them would die of lonesomeness up here.” Then he addressed himself to Bo. “How about you? You see I figured you’d be the one that liked it, an’ your sister the one who wouldn’t.”

“I won’t get lonesome very soon,” replied Bo.

“I’m glad. It worried me some…not ever havin’ girls as company before. An’ in a day or so, when you’re rested, I’ll help you pass the time.”

Bo’s eyes were full of flashing interest, and Helen asked him: “How?”

It was a sincere expression of her curiosity and not either a doubtful or ironic challenge of an educated woman to a man of the forest. But as a challenge he took it.

“How?” he repeated, and a strange smile flitted across his face. “Why, by givin’ you rides an’ climbs to beautiful places. An’ then, if you’re interested, to show you how little so-called civilized people know of Nature.”

Helen realized then that what ever his calling, hunter or wanderer or hermit, he was not uneducated, even if he appeared illiterate.

“I’ll be happy to learn from you,” she said.

“Me, too!” chimed in Bo. “You can’t tell too much to anyone from Missouri.”

He smiled then, and that warmed Helen to him, for then he seemed less removed from other people. About this hunter there began to be something of the very nature of which he spoke—a stillness, aloofness, an unbreakable tranquility, a cold clear spirit like that in the mountain air, a physical something not unlike the tamed wildness of his pets, or the strength of the pines.

“I’ll bet I can tell you more’n you’ll ever remember,” he said.

“What’ll you bet,” retorted Bo.

“Well, more roast turkey against…say somethin’ wise when you’re safe an’ home to your Uncle Al’s, runnin’ his ranch.”

“Agreed. Nell, you hear?”

Helen nodded her head.

“All right. We’ll leave it to Nell,” began Dorn half seriously. “Now I’ll tell you, first, for the fun of passin’ time we’ll ride an’ race my horses out in the park. An’ we’ll fish in the brooks an’ hunt in the woods. There’s an old silvertip around that you can see me kill. An’ we’ll climb to the peaks an’ see wonderful sights…. So much for that. Now, if you really want to learn…or if you only want me to tell you…well, that’s no matter. Only I’ll win the bet. You’ll see how this park lies on the crater of a volcano an’ was once full of water…an’ how the snow blows in on one side in winter, a hundred feet deep, when there’s none in the other…. An’ the trees…how they grow an’ live an’ fight one another an’ depend on each other, an’ protect the forest from storm winds…. An’ how they hold the water that is the fountains of the great rivers…. An’ how the creatures an’ things that live in them or on them are good for them, an’ neither could live without the other…. An’ then I’ll show you my pets tame an’ untamed, an’ tell you how it’s man that makes any creature wild…how easy they are to tame…an’ how they learn to love you…. An’ there’s the life of the forest, the strife of it…how the bear lives, an’ the cats, an’ the wolves, an’ the deer…. You’ll see how cruel Nature is…how savage an’ wild the wolf or cougar tears down the deer…how a wolf loves fresh hot blood an’ how a cougar unrolls the skin of a deer back from his neck…. An’ you’ll see that this cruelty of Nature…this work of the wolf an’ cougar is what makes the deer so beautiful an’ healthy an’ swift an’ sensitive. Without his deadly foes the deer would deteriorate an’ die out…. An’ you’ll see how this principle works out among all creatures of the forest. Strife! It’s the meanin’ of all creation an’ the salvation…. If you’re quick to see, you’ll learn that the Nature here in the wilds is the same as that of men…only men are no longer cannibals. Trees fight to live…birds fight…animals fight…men fight…. They all live off one another. An’ it’s this fightin’ that brings them all closer an’ closer to bein’ perfect. But nothin’ will ever be perfect.”

“But how about religion?” interrupted Helen earnestly.

“Nature has a religion an’ it’s to live…to grow…to reproduce, each of its kind.”

“But that is not God in the immortality of the soul,” declared Helen.

“Well, it’s as close to God an’ immortality as Nature ever gets.”

“Oh, you would rob me of my religion!”

“No, I just talk as I see life,” replied Dorn reflectively, as he poked a stick into the red embers of the fire. “Maybe I have a religion. I don’t know. But it’s not the kind you have…not the Bible kind…. That kind doesn’t keep the men in Pine an’ Snowdrop an’ all over…sheepmen an’ ranchers an’ farmers an’ travelers, such as I’ve known…the religion they prefer doesn’t keep them from lyin’, cheatin’, stealin’, an’ killin’…. I reckon no man who lives as I do, which perhaps is my religion, will lie or cheat or kill, unless it’s to kill in self-defense or like I’d do if Snake Anson would ride up here now…. My religion, maybe, is love of life…wild life as it was in the beginnin’…an’ the wind that blows secrets from everywhere, an’ the water that sings all day an’ night, an’ the stars that shine constant, an’ the trees that speak somehow, an’ the rocks that aren’t dead…. I’m never alone here or on the trails. There’s somethin’ unseen, but always with me. An’ that’s it. Call it God if you like…. But what stalls me is…where was that spirit when this earth was a ball of fiery gas? Where will that spirit be when all life is frozen out or burned out on this globe an’ it hangs dead in space like the moon? That time will come…. There’s no waste in Nature. Not the littlest atom is destroyed. It changes, that’s all, as you see this pine wood go up in smoke an’ feel somethin’ that’s heat come out of it. Where does that go? It’s not lost. Nothin’ is lost…. So, the beautiful an’ savin’ thought is, maybe all rock an’ wood, water an’ blood an’ flesh are resolved back into the elements to come to life somewhere again sometime.”

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