The Zane Grey Megapack

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by Zane Grey


  Something swelled within my breast at the thought that for the time I was part of that wild scene. The eye of an eagle soaring above would have placed me as well as my lion among the few living things in the range of his all-compassing vision. Therefore, all was mine, not merely the lion—for he was only the means to an end—but the stupendous, unnameable thing beneath me, this chasm that hid mountains in the shades of its cliffs, and the granite tombs, some gleaming pale, passionless, others red and warm, painted by a master hand; and the wind-caves, dark-portaled under their mist curtains, and all that was deep and far off, unapproachable, unattainable, of beauty exceeding, dressed in ever-changing hues, was mine by right of presence, by right of the eye to see and the mind to keep.

  “Waa-hoo!”

  The cry lifted itself out of the depths. I saw Jones on the ridge of cedars.

  “All right here—have you kept your line there?” he yelled.

  “All’s well—come along, come along,” I replied.

  I watched them coming, and all the while my lion never moved. The hounds reached the base of the cliff under me, but they could not find the lion, though they scented him, for they kept up a continual baying. Jim got up to the shelf under me and said they had tied up the lion and left him below. Jones toiled slowly up the slope.

  “Some one ought to stay down there; he might jump,” I called in warning.

  “That crag is forty feet high on this side,” he replied.

  I clambered back over the uneven mass, let myself down between the boulders and crawled under a dark ridge, and finally with Jim catching my rifle and camera and then lending his shoulders, I reached the bench below. Jones came puffing around a corner of the cliff, and soon all three of us with the hounds stood out on the rocky shelf with only a narrow space between us and the crouching lion.

  Before we had a moment to speak, much less form a plan of attack, the lion rose, spat at us defiantly, and deliberately jumped off the crag. We heard him strike with a frightful thud.

  Surprise held us dumb. To take the leap to the slope below seemed beyond any beast not endowed with wings. We saw the lion bounding down the identical trail which the other lion had taken. Jones came out of his momentary indecision.

  “Hold the dogs! Call them back!” he yelled hoarsely. “They’ll kill the lion we tied! They’ll kill him!”

  The hounds had scattered off the bench here and there, everywhere, to come together on the trail below. Already they were in full cry with the matchless Don at the fore. Manifestly to call them back was an injustice, as well as impossible. In ten seconds they were out of sight.

  In silence we waited, each listening, each feeling the tragedy of the situation, each praying that they would pass by the poor, helpless, bound lion. Suddenly the regular baying swelled to a burst of savage, snarling fury, such as the pack made in a vicious fight. This ceased—short silence ensued; Don’s sharp voice woke the echoes, then the regular baying continued.

  As with one thought, we all sat down. Painful as the certainty was it was not so painful as that listening, hoping suspense.

  “Shore they can’t be blamed,” said Jim finally. “Bumping their nose into a tied lion that way—how’d they know?”

  “Who could guess the second lion would jump off that quick and run back to our captive?” burst out Jones.

  “Shore we might have knowed it,” replied Jim. “Well, I’m goin’ after the pack.”

  He gathered up his lasso and strode off the bench. Jones said he would climb back to the rim, and I followed Jim.

  Why the lions ran in that particular direction was clear to me when I saw the trail. It was a runway, smooth and hard packed. I trudged along it with rather less enjoyment than on any trail I had ever followed to the canyon. Jim waited for me over the cedar ridge and showed me where the captive lion lay dead. The hounds had not torn him. They had killed him and passed on after the other.

  “He was a fine fellow, all of seven feet, we’ll skin him on our way back.”

  Only dogged determination coupled with a sense of duty to the hounds kept us on that trail. For the time being enthusiasm had been submerged. But we had to follow the pack.

  Jim, less weighted down and perhaps less discouraged, forged ahead up and down. The sun had burned all the morning coolness out of the air. I perspired and panted and began to grow weary. Jim’s signal called me to hurry. I took to a trot and came upon him and the hounds under a small cedar. The lion stood among the dead branches. His sides where shaking convulsively, and his short breaths could be plainly heard. He had the most blazing eyes and most untamed expression of any wild creature I have ever seen; and this amazed me considering I had kept him on a crag for over an hour, and had come to look upon him as my own.

  “What’ll we do, Jim, now that we have him treed?”

  “Shore, we’ll tie him up,” declared Jim.

  The lion stayed in the cedar long enough for me to photograph him twice, then he leaped down again and took to his back trail. We followed as fast as we could, soon to find that the hounds had put him up another cedar. From this he jumped down among the dogs, scattered them as if they had been so many leaves, and bounded up the slope out of sight.

  I laid aside my rifle and camera and tried to keep up with Jim. The lion ran straight up the slope and treed again under the wall. Before we covered half the distance he was on the go once more, flying down in clouds of dust.

  “Don is makin’ him hump,” said Jim.

  And that alone was enough to spur us on. We would reward the noble hound if we had the staying power. Don and his pack ran westward this time, and along a mile of the beaten trail put him up two more trees. But these we could not see and judged only by the sound.

  “Look there!” cried Jim. “Darn me if he ain’t comin’ right at us.”

  It was true. Ahead of us the lion appeared, loping wearily. We stopped in our tracks undecided. Jim drew his revolver. Once or twice the lion disappeared behind stones and cedars. When he sighted us he stopped, looked back, then again turning toward us, he left the trail to plunge down. He had barely got out of sight when old Don came pattering along the trail; then Ranger leading the others. Don did not even put his nose to the ground where the lion had switched, but leaped aside and went down. Here the long section of slope between the lion’s runway and the second wall had been weathered and worn, racked and convulsed into deep ravines, with ridges between. We climbed and fell and toiled on, always with the bay of the hounds in our ears. We leaped fissures, we loosened avalanches, rolling them to crash and roar below, and send long, rumbling echoes out into the canyon.

  A gorge in the yellow rock opened suddenly before us. We stood at the constricted neck of one of the great splits in the second wall. The side opposite was almost perpendicular, and formed of mass on mass of broken stones. This was a weathered slope on a gigantic scale. Points of cliffs jutted out; caves and cracks lined the wall.

  “This is a rough place,” said Jim; “but a lion could get over the second wall here, an’ I believe a man could too. The hounds seemed to be back further toward where the split narrows.”

  Through densely massed cedars and thickets of prickly thorns we wormed our way to come out at the neck of the gorge.

  “There ye are!” sang out Jim. The hounds were all on a flat shelf some few feet below us, and on a sharp point of rock close by, but too far for the dogs to reach, crouched the lion. He was gasping and frothing at the mouth.

  “Shore if he’d only stay there—” said Jim.

  He loosened his lasso, and stationing himself just above the tired beast he prepared to cast down the loop. The first throw failed of its purpose, but the rope hit the lion. He got up painfully it seemed, and faced the dogs. That way barred he turned to the cliff. Almost opposite him a shelf leaned out. He looked at it, then paced to and fro like a beast in a cage.

  He looked again at the hounds, then up at us, all around, and finally concentrated his attention on the shelf; his long length sagge
d in the middle, he stretched low, his muscles gathered and strung, and he sprang like a tawny streak.

  His aim was true, the whole forepart of his body landed on the shelf and he hung there. Then he slipped. We distinctly heard his claws scrape the hard, smooth rock. He fell, turning a somersault, struck twenty feet below on the rough slant, bounded from that to fall down, striking suddenly and then to roll, a yellow wheel that lodged behind a rock and stretched out to move no more.

  The hounds were silent; Jim and I were silent; a few little stones rattled, then were still. The dead silence of the canyon seemed to pay tribute to the lion’s unquenchable spirit and to the freedom he had earned to the last.

  VIII

  How long Jim and I sat there we never knew. The second tragedy, not so pitiful but as heart sickening as the first, crushed our spirits.

  “Shore he was a game lion,” said Jim. “An’ I’ll have to get his skin.”

  “I’m all in, Jim. I couldn’t climb out of that hole.” I said.

  “You needn’t. Rest a little, take a good drink an’ leave your canteen here for me; then get your things back there on the trail an’ climb out. We’re not far from West Point. I’ll go back after the first lion’s skin an’ then climb straight up. You lead my horse to the point where you came off the rim.”

  He clattered along the gorge knocking the stones and started down. I watched him letting himself over the end of the huge slabs until he passed out of my sight. A good, long drink revived me and I began the ascent.

  From that moment on time did not matter to me. I forgot all about it. I felt only my leaden feet and my laboring chest and dripping skin. I did not even notice the additional weight of my rifle and camera though they must have overburdened me. I kept my eyes on the lion runway and plunged away with short steps. To look at these towering walls would have been to surrender.

  At last, stumbling, bursting, sick, I gained the rim and had to rest before I could mount. When I did get into the saddle I almost fell from it.

  Jones and Emett were waiting for me at the promontory where I had tied my horse, and were soon acquainted with the particulars of my adventure, and that Jim would probably not get out for hours. We made tracks for camp, and never did a place rouse in me such a sense of gratefulness. Emett got dinner and left on the fire a kettle of potato stew for Jim. It was almost dark when that worthy came riding into camp. We never said a word as he threw the two lion skins on the ground.

  “Fellows, you shore have missed the wind-up!” he exclaimed.

  We all looked at him and he looked at us.

  “Was there any more?” I asked weakly.

  “Shore! An’ it beats hell! When I got the skin of the lion the dogs killed I started to work up to the place I knowed you’d leave my horse. It’s bad climbing where you came down. I got on the side of that cliff an’ saw where I could work out, if I could climb a smooth place. So I tried. There was little cracks an’ ridges for my feet and hands. All to once, just above where I helped you down, I heard a growl. Looking up I saw a big lion, bigger’n any we chased except Sultan, an’ he was pokin’ his head out of a hole, an’ shore telling me to come no further. I couldn’t let go with either hand to reach my gun, because I’d have fallen, so I yelled at him with all my might. He spit at me an’ then walked out of the hole over the bench as proud as a lord an’ jumped down where I couldn’t see him any more. I climbed out all right but he’d gone. An’ I’ll tell you for a minute, he shore made me sweat.”

  “By George!” I yelled, greatly excited. “I heard that lion breathing. Don chased him up there. I heard hard, wheezing breaths somewhere behind me, but in the excitement I didn’t pay any attention to them. I thought it was Jones panting, but now I know what it meant.”

  “Shore. He was there all the time, lookin’ at you an’ maybe he could have reached you.”

  We were all too exhausted for more discussion and putting that off until the next day we sought our beds. It was hardly any wonder that I felt myself jumping even in my sleep, and started up wildly more than once in the dead of night.

  Morning found us all rather subdued, yet more inclined to a philosophical resignation as regarded the difficulties of our special kind of hunting. Capturing the lions on the level of the plateau was easy compared to following them down into canyons and bringing them up alone. We all agreed that that was next to impossible. Another feature, which before we had not considered, added to our perplexity and it was a dawning consciousness that we would be perhaps less cruel if we killed the lions outright. Jones and Emett arrayed themselves on the side that life even in captivity was preferable; while Jim and I, no doubt still under the poignant influence of the last lion’s heroic race and end, inclined to freedom or death. We compromised on the reasonable fact that as yet we had shown only a jackass kind of intelligence.

  About eleven o’clock while the others had deserted camp temporarily for some reason or other, I was lounging upon an odorous bed of pine needles. The sun shone warmly, the sky gleamed bright azure through the openings of the great trees, a dry west breeze murmured through the forest. I was lying on my bed musing idly and watching a yellow woodpecker when suddenly I felt a severe bite on my shoulder. I imagined an ant had bitten me through my shirt. In a moment or so afterward I received, this time on my breast, another bite that left no room for imagination. There was some kind of an animal inside my shirt, and one that made a mosquito, black-fly, or flea seem tame.

  Suddenly a thought swept on the heels of my indolent and rather annoying realization. Could I have gotten from the Navajo what Jim and Jones so characteristically called “’em”? I turned cold all over. And on the very instant I received another bite that burned like fire.

  The return of my companions prevented any open demonstration of my fears and condition of mind, but I certainly swore inwardly. During the dinner hour I felt all the time as if I had on a horsehair shirt with the ends protruding toward my skin, and, in the exaggerated sensitiveness of the moment, made sure “’em” were chasing up and down my back.

  After dinner I sneaked off into the woods. I remembered that Emett had said there was only one way to get rid of “’em,” and that was to disrobe and make a microscopical search of garments and person. With serious mind and murderous intent I undressed. In the middle of the back of my jersey I discovered several long, uncanny, gray things.

  “I guess I got ’em,” I said gravely.

  Then I sat on a pine log in a state of unadorned nature, oblivious to all around, intent only on the massacre of the things that had violated me. How much time flew I could not guess. Great loud “Haw-haws!” roused me to consternation. There behind me stood Jones and Emett shaking as if with the ague.

  “It’s not funny!” I shouted in a rage. I had the unreasonable suspicion that they had followed me to see my humiliation. Jones, who cracked a smile about as often as the equinoxes came, and Emett the sober Mormon, laughed until they cried.

  “I was—just wondering—what your folks would—think—if they—saw you—now,” gurgled Jones.

  That brought to me the humor of the thing, and I joined in their mirth.

  “All I hope is that you fellows will get ’em too,” I said.

  “The Good Lord preserve me from that particular breed of Navvy’s,” cried Emett.

  Jones wriggled all over at the mere suggestion. Now so much from the old plainsman, who had confessed to intimate relations with every creeping, crawling thing in the West, attested powerfully to the unforgettable singularity of what I got from Navvy.

  I returned to camp determined to make the best of the situation, which owing to my failure to catch all of the gray devils, remained practically unchanged. Jim had been acquainted with my dilemma, as was manifest in his wet eyes and broad grin with which he greeted me.

  “I think I’d scalp the Navvy,” he said.

  “You make the Indian sleep outside after this, snow or no snow,” was Jones’ suggestion.

  “No I won’t; I w
on’t show a yellow streak like that. Besides, I want to give ’em to you fellows.”

  A blank silence followed my statement, to which Jim replied:

  “Shore that’ll be easy; Jones’ll have ’em, so’ll Emett, an’ by thunder I’m scratchin’ now.”

  “Navvy, look here,” I said severely, “mucha no bueno! heap bad! You—me!” here I scratched myself and made signs that a wooden Indian would have understood.

  “Me savvy,” he replied, sullenly, then flared up. “Heap big lie.”

  He turned on his heel, erect, dignified, and walked away amid the roars of my gleeful comrades.

  IX

  One by one my companions sought their blankets, leaving the shadows, the dying embers, the slow-rising moan of the night wind to me. Old Moze got up from among the other hounds and limped into my tent, where I heard him groan as he lay down. Don, Sounder, and Ranger were fast asleep in well-earned rest. Shep, one of the pups, whined and impatiently tossed his short chain. Remembering that he had not been loose all day, I unbuckled his collar and let him go.

  He licked my hand, stretched and shook himself, lifted his shapely, sleek head and sniffed the wind. He trotted around the circle cast by the fire and looked out into the darkening shadows. It was plain that Shep’s instincts were developing fast; he was ambitious to hunt. But sure in my belief that he was afraid of the black night and would stay in camp, I went to bed.

  The Navajo who slept with me snored serenely and Moze growled in his dreams; the wind swept through the pines with an intermittent rush. Some time in the after part of the night I heard a distant sound. Remote, mournful, wild, it sent a chill creeping over me. Borne faintly to my ears, it was a fit accompaniment to the moan of the wind in the pines. It was not the cry of a trailing wolf, nor the lonesome howl of a prowling coyote, nor the strange, low sound, like a cough, of a hunting cougar, though it had a semblance of all three. It was the bay of a hound, thinned out by distance, and it served to keep me wide awake. But for a while, what with the roar and swell of the wind and Navvy’s snores, I could hear it only at long intervals.

 

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