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CHAPTER 14. ALL HEROES BUT ONE
As we rode up the slope of Buckskin, the sunrise glinted red-gold through the aisles
of frosted pines, giving us a hunter's glad greeting.
With all due respect to, and appreciation of, the breaks of the Siwash, we
unanimously decided that if cougars inhabited any other section of canyon
country, we preferred it, and were going to find it.
We had often speculated on the appearance of the rim wall directly across the neck of
the canyon upon which we were located.
It showed a long stretch of breaks, fissures, caves, yellow crags, crumbled
ruins and clefts green with pinyon pine.
As a crow flies, it was only a mile or two straight across from camp, but to reach it,
we had to ascend the mountain and head the canyon which deeply indented the slope.
A thousand feet or more above the level bench, the character of the forest changed;
the pines grew thicker, and interspersed among them were silver spruces and balsams.
Here in the clumps of small trees and underbrush, we began to jump deer, and in a
few moments a greater number than I had ever seen in all my hunting experiences
loped within range of my eye.
I could not look out into the forest where an aisle or lane or glade stretched to any
distance, without seeing a big gray deer cross it.
Jones said the herds had recently come up from the breaks, where they had wintered.
These deer were twice the size of the Eastern species, and as fat as well-fed
cattle.
They were almost as tame, too.
A big herd ran out of one glade, leaving behind several curious does, which watched
us intently for a moment, then bounded off with the stiff, springy bounce that so
amused me.
Sounder crossed fresh trails one after another; Jude, Tige and Ranger followed
him, but hesitated often, barked and whined; Don started off once, to come
sneaking back at Jones's stern call.
But surly old Moze either would not or could not obey, and away he dashed.
***! Jones sent a charge of fine shot after him.
He yelped, doubled up as if stung, and returned as quickly as he had gone.
"Hyar, you white and black *** dog," said Jones, "get in behind, and stay there."
We turned to the right after a while and got among shallow ravines.
Gigantic pines grew on the ridges and in the hollows, and everywhere bluebells shone
blue from the white frost.
Why the frost did not kill these beautiful flowers was a mystery to me.
The horses could not step without crushing them.
Before long, the ravines became so deep that we had to zigzag up and down their
sides, and to force our horses through the aspen thickets in the hollows.
Once from a ridge I saw a troop of deer, and stopped to watch them.
Twenty-seven I counted outright, but there must have been three times that number.
I saw the herd break across a glade, and watched them until they were lost in the
forest.
My companions having disappeared, I pushed on, and while working out of a wide, deep
hollow, I noticed the sunny patches fade from the bright slopes, and the golden
streaks vanish among the pines.
The sky had become overcast, and the forest was darkening.
The "Waa-hoo," I cried out returned in echo only.
The wind blew hard in my face, and the pines began to bend and roar.
An immense black cloud enveloped Buckskin.
Satan had carried me no farther than the next ridge, when the forest frowned dark as
twilight, and on the wind whirled flakes of snow.
Over the next hollow, a white pall roared through the trees toward me.
Hardly had I time to get the direction of the trail, and its relation to the trees
nearby, when the storm enfolded me.
Of his own accord Satan stopped in the lee of a bushy spruce.
The roar in the pines equaled that of the cave under Niagara, and the bewildering,
whirling mass of snow was as difficult to see through as the tumbling, seething
waterfall.
I was confronted by the possibility of passing the night there, and calming my
fears as best I could, hastily felt for my matches and knife.
The prospect of being lost the next day in a white forest was also appalling, but I
soon reassured myself that the storm was only a snow squall, and would not last
long.
Then I gave myself up to the pleasure and beauty of it.
I could only faintly discern the dim trees; the limbs of the spruce, which partially
protected me, sagged down to my head with their burden; I had but to reach out my
hand for a snowball.
Both the wind and snow seemed warm. The great flakes were like swan feathers on
a summer breeze. There was something joyous in the whirl of
snow and roar of wind.
While I bent over to shake my holster, the storm passed as suddenly as it had come.
When I looked up, there were the pines, like pillars of Parian marble, and a white
shadow, a vanishing cloud fled, with receding roar, on the wings of the wind.
Fast on this retreat burst the warm, bright sun.
I faced my course, and was delighted to see, through an opening where the ravine
cut out of the forest, the red-tipped peaks of the canyon, and the vaulted dome I had
named St. Marks.
As I started, a new and unexpected after- feature of the storm began to manifest
itself.
The sun being warm, even to melt the snow, and under the trees a heavy rain fell, and
in the glades and hollows a fine mist blew. Exquisite rainbows hung from white-tipped
branches and curved over the hollows.
Glistening patches of snow fell from the pines, and broke the showers.
In a quarter of an hour, I rode out of the forest to the rim wall on dry ground.
Against the green pinyons Frank's white horse stood out conspicuously, and near him
browsed the mounts of Jim and Wallace. The boys were not in evidence.
Concluding they had gone down over the rim, I dismounted and kicked off my chaps, and
taking my rifle and camera, hurried to look the place over.
To my surprise and interest, I found a long section of rim wall in ruins.
It lay in a great curve between the two giant capes; and many short, sharp,
projecting promontories, like the teeth of a saw, overhung the canyon.
The slopes between these points of cliff were covered with a deep growth of pinyon,
and in these places descent would be easy.
Everywhere in the corrugated wall were rents and rifts; cliffs stood detached like
islands near a shore; yellow crags rose out of green clefts; jumble of rocks, and
slides of rim wall, broken into blocks, massed under the promontories.
The singular raggedness and wildness of the scene took hold of me, and was not
dispelled until the baying of Sounder and Don roused action in me.
Apparently the hounds were widely separated.
Then I heard Jim's yell. But it ceased when the wind lulled, and I
heard it no more.
Running back from the point, I began to go down.
The way was steep, almost perpendicular; but because of the great stones and the
absence of slides, was easy.
I took long strides and jumps, and slid over rocks, and swung on pinyon branches,
and covered distance like a rolling stone.
At the foot of the rim wall, or at a line where it would have reached had it extended
regularly, the slope became less pronounced.
I could stand up without holding on to a support.
The largest pinyons I had seen made a forest that almost stood on end.
These trees grew up, down, and out, and twisted in curves, and many were two feet
in thickness.
During my descent, I halted at intervals to listen, and always heard one of the hounds,
sometimes several.
But as I descended for a long time, and did not get anywhere or approach the dogs, I
began to grow impatient.
A large pinyon, with a dead top, suggested a good outlook, so I climbed it, and saw I
could sweep a large section of the slope. It was a strange thing to look down hill,
over the tips of green trees.
Below, perhaps four hundred yards, was a slide open for a long way; all the rest was
green incline, with many dead branches sticking up like spars, and an occasional
crag.
From this perch I heard the hounds; then followed a yell I thought was Jim's, and
after it the bellowing of Wallace's rifle. Then all was silent.
The shots had effectually checked the yelping of the hounds.
I let out a yell. Another cougar that Jones would not lasso!
All at once I heard a familiar sliding of small rocks below me, and I watched the
open slope with greedy eyes.
Not a bit surprised was I to see a cougar break out of the green, and go tearing down
the slide. In less than six seconds, I had sent six
steel-jacketed bullets after him.
Puffs of dust rose closer and closer to him as each bullet went nearer the mark and the
last showered him with gravel and turned him straight down the canyon slope.
I slid down the dead pinyon and jumped nearly twenty feet to the soft sand below,
and after putting a loaded clip in my rifle, began kangaroo leaps down the slope.
When I reached the point where the cougar had entered the slide, I called the hounds,
but they did not come nor answer me.
Notwithstanding my excitement, I appreciated the distance to the bottom of
the slope before I reached it.
In my haste, I ran upon the verge of a precipice twice as deep as the first rim
wall, but one glance down sent me shatteringly backward.
With all the breath I had left I yelled: "Waa-hoo!
Waa-hoo!"
From the echoes flung at me, I imagined at first that my friends were right on my
ears. But no real answer came.
The cougar had probably passed along this second rim wall to a break, and had gone
down. His trail could easily be taken by any of
the hounds.
Vexed and anxious, I signaled again and again.
Once, long after the echo had gone to sleep in some hollow canyon, I caught a faint
"Wa-a-ho-o-o!"
But it might have come from the clouds. I did not hear a hound barking above me on
the slope; but suddenly, to my amazement, Sounder's deep bay rose from the abyss
below.
I ran along the rim, called till I was hoarse, leaned over so far that the blood
rushed to my head, and then sat down.
I concluded this canyon hunting could bear some sustained attention and thought, as
well as frenzied action.
Examination of my position showed how impossible it was to arrive at any clear
idea of the depth or size, or condition of the canyon slopes from the main rim wall
above.
The second wall--a stupendous, yellow-faced cliff two thousand feet high--curved to my
left round to a point in front of me.
The intervening canyon might have been a half mile wide, and it might have been ten
miles. I had become disgusted with judging
distance.
The slope above this second wall facing me ran up far above my head; it fairly
towered, and this routed all my former judgments, because I remembered distinctly
that from the rim this yellow and green
mountain had appeared an insignificant little ridge.
But it was when I turned to gaze up behind me that I fully grasped the immensity of
the place.
This wall and slope were the first two steps down the long stairway of the Grand
Canyon, and they towered over me, straight up a half-mile in dizzy height.
To think of climbing it took my breath away.
Then again Sounder's bay floated distinctly to me, but it seemed to come from a
different point.
I turned my ear to the wind, and in the succeeding moments I was more and more
baffled. One bay sounded from below and next from
far to the right; another from the left.
I could not distinguish voice from echo. The acoustic properties of the amphitheater
beneath me were too wonderful for my comprehension.
As the bay grew sharper, and correspondingly more significant, I became
distracted, and focused a strained vision on the canyon deeps.
I looked along the slope to the notch where the wall curved and followed the base line
of the yellow cliff. Quite suddenly I saw a very small black
object moving with snail-like slowness.
Although it seemed impossible for Sounder to be so small, I knew it was he.
Having something now to judge distance from, I conceived it to be a mile, without
the drop.
If I could hear Sounder, he could hear me, so I yelled encouragement.
The echoes clapped back at me like so many slaps in the face.
I watched the hound until he disappeared among broken heaps of stone, and long after
that his bay floated to me.
Having rested, I essayed the discovery of some of my lost companions or the hounds,
and began to climb.
Before I started, however, I was wise enough to study the rim wall above, to
familiarize myself with the break so I would have a landmark.
Like horns and spurs of gold the pinnacles loomed up.
Massed closely together, they were not unlike an astounding pipe-organ.
I had a feeling of my littleness, that I was lost, and should devote every moment
and effort to the saving of my life. It did not seem possible I could be
hunting.
Though I climbed diagonally, and rested often, my heart pumped so hard I could hear
it.
A yellow crag, with a round head like an old man's cane, appealed to me as near the
place where I last heard from Jim, and toward it I labored.
Every time I glanced up, the distance seemed the same.
A climb which I decided would not take more than fifteen minutes, required an hour.
While resting at the foot of the crag, I heard more baying of hounds, but for my
life I could not tell whether the sound came from up or down, and I commenced to
feel that I did not much care.
Having signaled till I was hoarse, and receiving none but mock answers, I decided
that if my companions had not toppled over a cliff, they were wisely withholding their
breath.
Another stiff pull up the slope brought me under the rim wall, and there I groaned,
because the wall was smooth and shiny, without a break.
I plodded slowly along the base, with my rifle ready.
Cougar tracks were so numerous I got tired of looking at them, but I did not forget
that I might meet a tawny fellow or two among those narrow passes of shattered
rock, and under the thick, dark pinyons.
Going on in this way, I ran point-blank into a pile of bleached bones before a
cave.
I had stumbled on the lair of a lion and from the looks of it one like that of Old
Tom. I flinched twice before I threw a stone
into the dark-mouthed cave.
What impressed me as soon as I found I was in no danger of being pawed and clawed
round the gloomy spot, was the fact of the bones being there.
How did they come on a slope where a man could hardly walk?
Only one answer seemed feasible.
The lion had made his kill one thousand feet above, had pulled his quarry to the
rim and pushed it over.
In view of the theory that he might have had to drag his victim from the forest, and
that very seldom two lions worked together, the fact of the location of the bones as
startling.
Skulls of wild horses and deer, antlers and countless bones, all crushed into
shapelessness, furnished indubitable proof that the carcasses had fallen from a great
height.
Most remarkable of all was the skeleton of a cougar lying across that of a horse.
I believed--I could not help but believe that the cougar had fallen with his last
victim.
Not many rods beyond the lion den, the rim wall split into towers, crags and
pinnacles.
I thought I had found my pipe organ, and began to climb toward a narrow opening in
the rim. But I lost it.
The extraordinarily cut-up condition of the wall made holding to one direction
impossible. Soon I realized I was lost in a labyrinth.
I tried to find my way down again, but the best I could do was to reach the verge of a
cliff, from which I could see the canyon. Then I knew where I was, yet I did not
know, so I plodded wearily back.
Many a blind cleft did I ascend in the maze of crags.
I could hardly crawl along, still I kept at it, for the place was conducive to dire
thoughts.
A tower of Babel menaced me with tons of loose shale.
A tower that leaned more frightfully than the Tower of Pisa threatened to build my
tomb.
Many a lighthouse-shaped crag sent down little scattering rocks in ominous notice.
After toiling in and out of passageways under the shadows of these strangely formed
cliffs, and coming again and again to the same point, a blind pocket, I grew
desperate.
I named the baffling place Deception Pass, and then ran down a slide.
I knew if I could keep my feet I could beat the avalanche.
More by good luck than management I outran the roaring stones and landed safely.
Then rounding the cliff below, I found myself on a narrow ledge, with a wall to my
left, and to the right the tips of pinyon trees level with my feet.
Innocently and wearily I passed round a pillar-like corner of wall, to come face to
face with an old lioness and cubs.
I heard the mother snarl, and at the same time her ears went back flat, and she
crouched.
The same fire of yellow eyes, the same grim snarling expression so familiar in my mind
since Old Tom had leaped at me, faced me here.
My recent vow of extermination was entirely forgotten and one frantic spring carried me
over the ledge. Crash!
I felt the brushing and scratching of branches, and saw a green blur.
I went down straddling limbs and hit the ground with a thump.
Fortunately, I landed mostly on my feet, in sand, and suffered no serious bruise.
But I was stunned, and my right arm was numb for a moment.
When I gathered myself together, instead of being grateful the ledge had not been on
the face of Point Sublime--from which I would most assuredly have leaped--I was the
angriest man ever let loose in the Grand Canyon.
Of course the cougars were far on their way by that time, and were telling neighbors
about the brave hunter's leap for life; so I devoted myself to further efforts to find
an outlet.
The niche I had jumped into opened below, as did most of the breaks, and I worked out
of it to the base of the rim wall, and tramped a long, long mile before I reached
my own trail leading down.
Resting every five steps, I climbed and climbed.
My rifle grew to weigh a ton; my feet were lead; the camera strapped to my shoulder
was the world.
Soon climbing meant trapeze work--long reach of arm, and pull of weight, high step
of foot, and spring of body. Where I had slid down with ease, I had to
strain and raise myself by sheer muscle.
I wore my left glove to tatters and threw it away to put the right one on my left
hand.
I thought many times I could not make another move; I thought my lungs would
burst, but I kept on.
When at last I surmounted the rim, I saw Jones, and flopped down beside him, and lay
panting, dripping, boiling, with scorched feet, aching limbs and numb chest.
"I've been here two hours," he said, "and I knew things were happening below; but to
climb up that slide would kill me. I am not young any more, and a steep climb
like this takes a young heart.
As it was I had enough work. Look!"
He called my attention to his trousers. They had been cut to shreds, and the right
trouser leg was missing from the knee down.
His shin was bloody. "Moze took a lion along the rim, and I went
after him with all my horse could do. I yelled for the boys, but they didn't
come.
Right here it is easy to go down, but below, where Moze started this lion, it was
impossible to get over the rim. The lion lit straight out of the pinyons.
I lost ground because of the thick brush and numerous trees.
Then Moze doesn't bark often enough. He treed the lion twice.
I could tell by the way he opened up and bayed.
The rascal ***-dog climbed the trees and chased the lion out.
That's what Moze did!
I got to an open space and saw him, and was coming up fine when he went down over a
hollow which ran into the canyon.
My horse tripped and fell, turning clear over with me before he threw me into the
brush. I tore my clothes, and got this bruise, but
wasn't much hurt.
My horse is pretty lame." I began a recital of my experience,
modestly omitting the incident where I bravely faced an old lioness.
Upon consulting my watch, I found I had been almost four hours climbing out.
At that moment, Frank poked a red face over the rim.
He was in shirt sleeves, sweating freely, and wore a frown I had never seen before.
He puffed like a porpoise, and at first could hardly speak.
"Where were--you--all?" he panted.
"Say! but mebbe this hasn't been a chase! Jim and Wallace an' me went tumblin' down
after the dogs, each one lookin' out for his perticilar dog, an' darn me if I don't
believe his lion, too.
Don took one oozin' down the canyon, with me hot-footin' it after him.
An' somewhere he treed thet lion, right below me, in a box canyon, sort of an
offshoot of the second rim, an' I couldn't locate him.
I blamed near killed myself more'n once.
Look at my knuckles! Barked em slidin' about a mile down a
smooth wall. I thought once the lion had jumped Don, but
soon I heard him barkin' again.
All thet time I heard Sounder, an' once I heard the pup.
Jim yelled, an' somebody was shootin'. But I couldn't find nobody, or make nobody
hear me.
Thet canyon is a mighty deceivin' place. You'd never think so till you go down.
I wouldn't climb up it again for all the lions in Buckskin.
Hello, there comes Jim oozin' up."
Jim appeared just over the rim, and when he got up to us, dusty, torn and *** out,
with Don, Tige and Ranger showing signs of collapse, we all blurted out questions.
But Jim took his time.
"Shore thet canyon is one hell of a place," he began finally.
"Where was everybody? Tige and the pup went down with me an'
treed a cougar.
Yes, they did, an' I set under a pinyon holdin' the pup, while Tige kept the cougar
treed. I yelled an' yelled.
After about an hour or two, Wallace came poundin' down like a giant.
It was a sure thing we'd get the cougar; an' Wallace was takin' his picture when the
blamed cat jumped.
It was embarrassin', because he wasn't polite about how he jumped.
We scattered some, an' when Wallace got his gun, the cougar was humpin' down the slope,
an' he was goin' so fast an' the pinyons was so thick thet Wallace couldn't get a
fair shot, an' missed.
Tige an' the pup was so scared by the shots they wouldn't take the trail again.
I heard some one shoot about a million times, an' shore thought the cougar was
done for.
Wallace went plungin' down the slope an' I followed.
I couldn't keep up with him--he shore takes long steps--an' I lost him.
I'm reckonin' he went over the second wall.
Then I made tracks for the top. Boys, the way you can see an' hear things
down in thet canyon, an' the way you can't hear an' see things is pretty funny."
"If Wallace went over the second rim wall, will he get back to-day?" we all asked.
"Shore, there's no tellin'."
We waited, lounged, and slept for three hours, and were beginning to worry about
our comrade when he hove in sight eastward, along the rim.
He walked like a man whose next step would be his last.
When he reached us, he fell flat, and lay breathing heavily for a while.
"Somebody once mentioned Israel Putnam's ascent of a hill," he said slowly.
"With all respect to history and a patriot, I wish to say Putnam never saw a hill!"
"Ooze for camp," called out Frank.
Five o'clock found us round a bright fire, all casting ravenous eyes at a smoking
supper. The smell of the Persian meat would have
made a wolf of a vegetarian.
I devoured four chops, and could not have been counted in the running.
Jim opened a can of maple syrup which he had been saving for a grand occasion, and
Frank went him one better with two cans of peaches.
How glorious to be hungry--to feel the craving for food, and to be grateful for
it, to realize that the best of life lies in the daily needs of existence, and to
battle for them!
Nothing could be stronger than the simple enumeration and statement of the facts of
Wallace's experience after he left Jim. He chased the cougar, and kept it in sight,
until it went over the second rim wall.
Here he dropped over a precipice twenty feet high, to alight on a fan-shaped slide
which spread toward the bottom.
It began to slip and move by jerks, and then started off steadily, with an
increasing roar. He rode an avalanche for one thousand feet.
The jar loosened bowlders from the walls.
When the slide stopped, Wallace extricated his feet and began to dodge the bowlders.
He had only time to jump over the large ones or dart to one side out of their way.
He dared not run.
He had to watch them coming. One huge stone hurtled over his head and
smashed a pinyon tree below.
When these had ceased rolling, and he had passed down to the red shale, he heard
Sounder baying near, and knew a cougar had been treed or cornered.
Hurdling the stones and dead pinyons, Wallace ran a mile down the slope, only to
find he had been deceived in the direction. He sheered off to the left.
Sounder's illusive bay came up from a deep cleft.
Wallace plunged into a pinyon, climbed to the ground, skidded down a solid slide, to
come upon an impassable the obstacle in the form of a solid wall of red granite.
Sounder appeared and came to him, evidently having given up the chase.
Wallace consumed four hours in making the ascent.
In the notch of the curve of the second rim wall, he climbed the slippery steps of a
waterfall.
At one point, if he had not been six feet five inches tall he would have been
compelled to attempt retracing his trail-- an impossible task.
But his height enabled him to reach a root, by which he pulled himself up.
Sounder he lassoed a la Jones, and hauled up.
At another spot, which Sounder climbed, he lassoed a pinyon above, and walked up with
his feet slipping from under him at every step.
The knees of his corduroy trousers were holes, as were the elbows of his coat.
The sole of his left boot, which he used most in climbing--was gone, and so was his
hat.