THERE were seven
notches in the juniper by the Lone Tree Spring for the seven seasons that
Little Pete had summered there, feeding his flocks in the hollow of the Ceriso.
The first time of coming he had struck his axe into the trunk meaning to make
firewood, but thought better of it, and thereafter chipped it in sheer
friendliness, as one claps an old acquaintance, for by the time the flock has
worked up the treeless windy stretch from the Little Antelope to the Ceriso,
even a lone juniper has a friendly look. And Little Pete was a friendly man,
though shy of demeanor, so that with the best will in the world for wagging his
tongue, he could scarcely pass the time of day with good countenance; the soul
of a jolly companion with the front and bearing of one of his own sheep.
He loved his dogs as
brothers; he was near akin to the wild things; he communed with the huddled
hills, and held intercourse with the stars, saying things to them in his heart
that his tongue stumbled over and refused. He knew his sheep by name, and had
respect to signs and seasons; his lips moved softly as he walked, making no
sound. Well--what would you? a man must have fellowship in some sort.
Whoso goes
a-shepherding in the desert hills comes to be at one with his companions,
growing brutish or converting them. Little Pete humanized his sheep. He
perceived lovable qualities in them, and differentiated the natures and
dispositions of inanimate things.
Not much of this
presented itself on slight acquaintance, for in fact he looked to be of rather
less account than his own dogs. He was undersized and hairy, and had a roving
eye; probably he washed once a year at the shearing as the sheep were washed.
About his body he wore a twist of sheepskin with the wool outward, holding in
place the tatters of his clothing. On hot days when he wreathed leaves about
his head, and wove him a pent of twigs among the scrub in the middle of his
flock, he looked a faun or some wood creature come out of pagan times, though
no pagan, as was clearly shown by the medal of the Sacred Heart that hung on
his hairy chest, worn open to all weathers. Where he went about sheep camps and
shearings, there was sly laughter and tapping of foreheads, but those who kept
the tale of his flocks spoke well of him and increased his wage.
Little Pete kept to the
same round year by year, breaking away from La Liebre after the spring
shearing, south around the foot of Pinos, swinging out to the desert in the
wake of the quick, strong rains, thence to Little Antelope in July to drink a
bottle for La Quatorze, and so to the Ceriso by the time the poppy fires were
burned quite out and the quail trooped at noon about the tepid pools. The
Ceriso is not properly mesa nor valley, but a long healed crater miles wide,
rimmed about with the jagged edge of the old cone.
It rises steeply from
the tilted mesa, overlooked by Black Mountain, darkly red as the red cattle
that graze among the honey- colored hills. These are blunt and rounded,
tumbling all down from the great crater and the mesa edge toward the long, dim
valley of Little Antelope. Its outward slope is confused with the outlines of
the hills, tumuli of blind cones, and the old lava flow that breaks away from
it by the west gap and the ravine of the spring; within, its walls are deeply
guttered by the torrent of winter rains.
In its cuplike hollow,
the sink of its waters, salt and bitter as all pools without an outlet, waxes
and wanes within a wide margin of bleaching reeds. Nothing taller shows in all
the Ceriso, and the wind among them fills all the hollow with an eerie
whispering. One spring rills down by the gorge of an old flow on the side
toward Little Antelope, and, but for the lone juniper that stood by it, there
is never a tree until you come to the foot of Black Mountain.
The flock of Little
Pete, a maverick strayed from some rodeo, a prospector going up to Black
Mountain, and a solitary antelope were all that passed through the Ceriso at
any time. The antelope had the best right. He came as of old habit; he had come
when the lightfoot herds ranged from here to the sweet, mist-watered canons of
the Coast Range, and the bucks went up to the windy mesas what time the young
ran with their mothers, nose to flank. They had ceased before the keen edge of
slaughter that defines the frontier of men.
All that a tardy law
had saved to the district of Little Antelope was the buck that came up the
ravine was the buck that came up the ravine of the Lone Tree Spring at the set
time of the year when Little Pete fed his flock in the Ceriso, and Pete averred
that they were glad to see one another. True enough they were each the
friendliest thing the other found there, for the law ran as far as the antelope
ranged, there were hill dwellers who took no account of it, namely, the
coyotes. They hunted the buck in season and out, bayed him down from the
feeding grounds, fended him from the pool, pursued him by relay races, ambushed
him in the pitfalls of the black rock.
There were seven
coyotes ranging the east side of the Ceriso at the time when Little Pete first
struck his axe into the juniper tree, slinking, sly-footed, and evil-eyed. Many
an evening the shepherd watched them running lightly in the hollow of the
crater, the flash-flash of the antelope’s white rump signaling the progress of
the chase. But always the buck outran or outwitted them, taking to the high
broken ridges where no split foot could follow his seven-leagued bounds. Many a
morning Little Pete, tending his cooking pot by a quavering sagebrush fire, saw
the antelope feeding down toward the Lone Tree Spring, and looked his
sentiments. The coyotes had spoken theirs all in the night with derisive
voices; never was there any love lost between a shepherd and a coyote. The
pronghorn’s chief recommendation to an acquaintance was that he could outdo
them.
After the third summer,
Pete began to perceive a reciprocal friendliness in the antelope. Early
mornings the shepherd saw him rising from his lair, or came often upon the warm
pressed hollow where he had lain within cry of his coyote-scaring fire. When it
was mid-day in the misty hollow and the shadows drawn close, stuck tight under
the juniper and the sage, they went each to his nooning in his own fashion, but
in the half light they drew near together.
Since the beginning of
the law the antelope had half forgotten his fear of man. He looked upon the
shepherd with steadfastness, he smelled the smell of sheep and the unhandled
earth, and the smell of wood smoke was in his hair. They had companionship
without speech; they conferred favors silently after the manner of those who
understand one another. The antelope led to the best feeding grounds, and Pete
kept the sheep from muddying the spring until the buck had drunk. When the
coyotes skulked in the scrub by night to deride him, the shepherd mocked them
in their own tongue, and promised the best of his lambs for the killing; but to
hear afar off their hunting howl stirred him out of sleep to curse with great
heartiness. At such times he thought of the antelope and wished him well.
Beginning with the west
gap opposite the Lone Tree Spring about the first of August, Pete would feed
all around the broken rim of the crater, up the gullies and down, and clean
through the hollow of it in a matter of two months, or if the winter had been a
wet one, a little longer, and in seven years the man and the antelope grew to
know each other very well. Where the flock fed the buck fed, keeping farthest
from the dogs, and at last he came to lie down with it.
That was after a season
of scant rains, when the feed was poor and the antelope’s flank grew thin; the
rabbits had trooped down to the irrigated lands, and the coyotes, made more
keen by hunger, pressed him hard. One of those smoky, yawning days when the sky
hugged the earth, and all sound fell back from a woolly atmosphere and broke
dully in the scrub, about the usual hour of their running between twilight and
mid-afternoon, the coyotes drove the tall buck, winded, desperate, and
foredone, to refuge among the silly sheep, where for fear of the dogs and the
man the howlers dared not come. He stood at bay there, fronting the shepherd,
brought up against a crisis greatly needing the help of speech.
Well--he had nearly as
much gift in that matter as Little Pete. Those two silent ones understood each
other; some assurance, the warrant of a free given faith, passed between them.
The buck lowered his head and eased the sharp throbbing of his ribs; the dogs
drew in the scattered flocks; they moved, keeping a little cleared space
nearest the buck; he moved with them; he began to feed. Thereafter the heart of
Little Pete warmed humanly toward the antelope, and the coyotes began to be
very personal in their abuse. That same night they drew off the shepherd’s dogs
by a ruse and stole two of his lambs.
The same seasons that
made the friendliness of the antelope and Little Pete wore the face of the
shepherd into a keener likeness to the weathered hills, and the juniper
flourishing greenly by the spring bade fair to outlast them both. The line of
ploughed lands stretched out mile by mile from the lower valley, and a solitary
homesteader built him a cabin at the foot of the Ceriso.
In seven years a coyote
may learn somewhat; those of the Ceriso learned the ways of Little Pete and the
antelope. Trust them to have noted, as the years moved, that the buck’s flanks
were lean and his step less free. Put it that the antelope was old, and that he
made truce with the shepherd to hide the failing of his powers; then if he came
earlier or stayed later than the flock, it would go hard with him. But as if he
knew their mind in the matter, the antelope delayed his coming until the salt
pool shrunk to its innermost ring of reeds, and the sun-cured grasses crisped
along the slope. It seemed the brute sense waked between him and the man to
make each aware of the other’s nearness. Often as Little Pete drove in by the
west gap he would sight the prongs of the buck rising over the barrier of black
rocks at the head of the ravine. Together they passed out of the crater,
keeping fellowship as far as the frontier of evergreen oaks. Here Little Pete
turned in by the cattle fences to come at La Liebre from the north, and the
antelope, avoiding all man-trails, growing daily more remote, passed into the
wooded hills on unguessed errands of his own.
Twice the homesteader
saw the antelope go up to the Ceriso at that set time of the year. The third
summer when he sighted him, a whitish speck moving steadily against the
fawn-colored background of the hills, the homesteader took down his rifle and
made haste into the crater. At that time his cabin stood on the remotest edge
of settlement, and the grip of the law was loosened in so long a reach.
"In the end the
coyotes will get him. Better that he fall to me," said the homesteader.
But, in fact, he was prompted by the love of mastery, which for the most part
moves men into new lands, whose creatures they conceive given over into their
hands.
The coyote that kept
the watch at the head of the ravine saw him come, and lifted up his voice in
the long-drawn dolorous whine that warned the other watchers in their unseen
stations in the scrub. The homesteader heard also, and let a curse softly under
his breath, for besides that they might scare his quarry, he coveted the howler’s
ears, in which the law upheld him. Never a tip nor a tail of one showed above
the sage when he had come up into the Ceriso.
The afternoon wore on,
the homesteader hid in the reeds, and the coyotes had forgotten him. Away to
the left in a windless blur of dust the sheep of Little Pete trailed up toward
the crater’s rim. The leader, watching by the spring, caught a jack rabbit and
was eating it quietly behind the black rock.
In the meantime the
last antelope came lightly and securely, by the gully, by the black rock and
the lone juniper into the Ceriso. The friendliness of the antelope for Little
Pete betrayed him. He came with some sense of home, expecting the flock and
protection of man-presence. He strayed witlessly into the open, his ears set to
catch the jangle of the bells. What he heard was the snick of the breech bolt
as the homesteader threw up the sight of his rifle, and a small demoniac cry
that ran from gutter to gutter of the crater rim, impossible to gauge for
numbers or distance.
At that moment Little
Pete worried the flock up the outward slope where the ruin of the old lava
flows gave sharply back the wrangle of the bells. Three weeks he had won up
from the Little Antelope, and three by way of the Sand Flat, where there was
great scarcity of water, and in all that time none of his kind had hailed him.
His heart warmed toward the juniper tree and the antelope whose hoof-prints he
found in the white dust of the mesa trail. Men had small respect by Little
Pete, women he had no time for: the antelope was the noblest thing he had ever
loved. The sheep poured through the gap and spread fan-wise down the gully;
behind them Little Pete twirled his staff, and made merry wordless noises in
his throat in anticipation of friendliness. "Ehu!" he cried when he
heard the hunting howl, "but they are at their tricks again," and
then in English he voiced a volley of broken, inconsequential oaths, for he saw
what the howlers were about.
One imputes a sixth
sense to that son of a thief misnamed the coyote, to make up for speech, persuasion,
concerted movement, in short, the human faculty. How else do they manage the
terrible relay races by which they make quarry of the fleetest footed? It was
so they plotted the antelope’s last running in the Ceriso: two to start the
chase from the black rock toward the red scar of a winter torrent, two to leave
the mouth of the wash when the first were winded, one to fend the ravine that
led up to the broken ridges, one to start out of the scrub at the base of a
smooth upward sweep, and, running parallel to it, keep the buck well into the
open; all these when their first spurt was done to cross leisurely to new
stations to take up another turn. Round they went in the hollow of the crater,
velvet-footed and sly even in full chase, and biding their time. It was a good
running, but it was almost done when away by the west gap the buck heard the
voice of Little Pete raised in adjuration and the friendly blether of the
sheep. Thin spirals of dust flared upward from the moving flocks and signaled
truce to chase. He broke for it with wide panting bounds and many a missed step
picked up with incredible eagerness, the thin rim of his nostrils oozing blood.
The coyotes saw and closed in about him, chopping quick and hard. Sharp ears
and sharp muzzles cast up at his throat, and were whelmed in a press of gray
flanks. One yelped, one went limping from a kick, and one went past him,
returning with a spring upon the heaving shoulder, and the man in the reeds
beside the bitter water rose up and fired.
All the luck of that
day’s hunting went to the homesteader, for he had killed an antelope and a
coyote with one shot, and though he had a bad quarter of an hour with a wild
and loathly shepherd, who he feared might denounce him to the law, in the end
he made off with the last antelope, swung limp and graceless across his
shoulder. The coyotes came back to the killing ground when they had watched him
safely down the ravine and were consoled with what they found. As they pulled
the body of the dead leader about before they began upon it, they noticed that
the homesteader had taken the ears of that also.
Little Pete lay in the
grass and wept simply; the tears made pallid traces in the season’s grime. He
suffered the torture, the question extraordinary of bereavement. If he had not
lingered so long in the meadow of Los Robles, if he had moved faster on the
Sand Flat trail,--but, in fact, he had come up against the inevitable. He had
been breathed upon by that spirit which goes before cities like an exhalation
and dries up the gossamer and the dew.
From that day the heart
had gone out of the Ceriso. It was a desolate hollow, reddish-hued and dim,
with brackish waters, and moreover the feed was poor. His eyes could not forget
their trick of roving the valley at all hours; he looked by the rill of the
spring for hoof-prints that were not there.
Fronting the west gap
there was a spot where he would not feed, where the grass stood up stiff and
black with what had dried upon it. He kept the flocks to the ridgy slopes where
the limited horizon permitted one to believe the crater was not quite empty.
His heart shook in the night to hear the long-drawn hunting howl, and shook
again remembering that he had nothing to be fearing for. After three weeks he
passed out on the other side and came that way no more. The juniper tree stood
greenly by the spring until the homesteader cut it down for firewood. Nothing
taller than the rattling reeds stirs in all the hollow of the Ceriso.
Mary Austin.