THE ROSE AND ITS THORN
Dawn found the ranch astir and a heavy
fog hanging over the Frio valley. Don Pierre
had a remuda corralled before sun-up, and insisted
on our riding his horses, an invitation which my employer
alone declined. For the first hour or two the
pack scouted the river bottoms with no success, and
Uncle Lance’s verdict was that the valley was
too soggy for any animal belonging to the cat family,
so we turned back to the divide between the Frio and
San Miguel. Here there grew among the hills many
Guajio thickets, and from the first one we beat, the
hounds opened on a hot trail in splendid chorus.
The pack led us through thickets for over a mile,
when they suddenly turned down a ravine, heading for
the river. With the ground ill splendid condition
for trailing, the dogs in full cry, the quarry sought
every shelter possible; but within an hour of striking
the scent, the pack came to bay in the encinal.
On coming up with the hounds, we found the animal
was a large catamount. A single shot brought
him from his perch in a scraggy oak, and the first
chase of the day was over. The pelt was worthless
and was not taken.
It was nearly noon when the kill was
made, and Don Pierre insisted that we return to the
ranch. Uncle Lance protested against wasting the
remainder of the day, but the courteous Creole urged
that the ground would be in fine condition for hunting
at least a week longer; this hunt he declared was
merely preliminary—to break the pack together
and give them a taste of the chase before attacking
the cougar. “Ah,” said Don Pierre,
with a deprecating shrug of the shoulders, “you
have nothing to hurry you home. I come by your
rancho an’ stay one hol’ week. You
come by mine, al’ time hurry. Sacré!
Let de li’l dogs rest, an’ in de mornin’,
mebbe we hunt de cougar. Ah, Meester Lance, we
must haff de pack fresh for him. By Gar, he was
one dam’ wil’ fellow. Mek one two
pass, so. Biff! two dog dead.”
Uncle Lance yielded, and we rode back
to the ranch. The next morning our party included
the three daughters of our host. Don Pierre led
the way on a roan stallion, and after two hours’
riding we crossed the San Miguel to the north of his
ranch. A few miles beyond we entered some chalky
hills, interspersed with white chaparral thickets which
were just bursting into bloom, with a fragrance that
was almost intoxicating. Under the direction
of our host, we started to beat a long chain of these
thickets, and were shortly rewarded by hearing the
pack give mouth. The quarry kept to the cover
of the thickets for several miles, impeding the chase
until the last covert in the chain was reached, where
a fight occurred with the lead hound. Don Pierre
was the first to reach the scene, and caught several
glimpses of a monster puma as he slunk away through
the Brazil brush, leaving one of the Don’s favorite
hounds lacerated to the bone. But the pack passed
on, and, lifting the wounded dog to a vaquero’s
saddle, we followed, lustily shouting to the hounds.
The spoor now turned down the San
Miguel, and the pace was such that it took hard riding
to keep within hearing. Mr. Vaux and Uncle Lance
usually held the lead, the remainder of the party,
including the girls, bringing up the rear. The
chase continued down stream for fully an hour, until
we encountered some heavy timber on the main Frio,
our course having carried us several miles to the
north of the McLeod ranch. Some distance below
the juncture with the San Miguel the river made a large
horseshoe, embracing nearly a thousand acres, which
was covered with a dense growth of ash, pecan, and
cypress. The trail led into this jungle, circling
it several times before leading away. We were
fortunately able to keep track of the chase from the
baying of the hounds without entering the timber,
and were watching its course, when suddenly it changed;
the pack followed the scent across a bridge of driftwood
on the Frio, and started up the river in full cry.
As the chase down the San Miguel passed
beyond the mouth of the creek, Theodore Quayle and
Frances Vaux dropped out and rode for the McLeod ranch.
It was still early in the day, and understanding their
motive, I knew they would rejoin us if their mission
was successful. By the sudden turn of the chase,
we were likely to pass several miles south of the
home of my sweetheart, but our location could be easily
followed by the music of the pack. Within an
hour after leaving us, Theodore and Frances rejoined
the chase, adding Tony Hunter and Esther to our numbers.
With this addition, I lost interest in the hunt, as
the course carried us straightaway five miles up the
stream. The quarry was cunning and delayed the
pack at every thicket or large body of timber encountered.
Several times he craftily attempted to throw the hounds
off the scent by climbing leaning trees, only to spring
down again. But the pack were running wide and
the ruse was only tiring the hunted. The scent
at times left the river and circled through outlying
mesquite groves, always keeping well under cover.
On these occasions we rested our horses, for the hunt
was certain to return to the river.
From the scattering order in which
we rode, I was afforded a good opportunity for free
conversation with Esther. But the information
I obtained was not very encouraging. Her mother’s
authority had grown so severe that existence under
the same roof was a mere armistice between mother
and daughter, while this day’s sport was likely
to break the already strained relations. The
thought that her suffering was largely on my account,
nerved me to resolution.
The kill was made late in the day,
in a bend of the river, about fifteen miles above
the Vaux ranch, forming a jungle of several thousand
acres. In this thickety covert the fugitive made
his final stand, taking refuge in an immense old live-oak,
the mossy festoons of which partially screened him
from view. The larger portion of the cavalcade
remained in the open, but the rest of us, under the
leadership of the two rancheros, forced our horses
through the underbrush and reached the hounds.
The pack were as good as exhausted by the long run,
and, lest the animal should spring out of the tree
and escape, we circled it at a distance. On catching
a fair view of the quarry, Uncle Lance called for a
carbine. Two shots through the shoulders served
to loosen the puma’s footing, when he came down
by easy stages from limb to limb, spitting and hissing
defiance into the upturned faces of the pack.
As he fell, we dashed in to beat off the dogs as a
matter of precaution, but the bullets had done their
work, and the pack mouthed the fallen feline with entire
impunity.
Dan Happersett dragged the dead puma
out with a rope over the neck for the inspection of
the girls, while our horses, which had had no less
than a fifty-mile ride, were unsaddled and allowed
a roll and a half hour’s graze before starting
back. As we were watering our mounts, I caught
my employer’s ear long enough to repeat what
I had learned about Esther’s home difficulties.
After picketing our horses, we strolled away from
the remainder of the party, when Uncle Lance remarked:
“Tom, your chance has come where you must play
your hand and play it boldly. I’ll keep
Tony at the Vaux ranch, and if Esther has to go home
to-night, why, of course, you’ll have to take
her. There’s your chance to run off and
marry. Now, Tom, you’ve never failed me
yet; and this thing has gone far enough. We’ll
give old lady McLeod good cause to hate us from now
on. I’ve got some money with me, and I’ll
rob the other boys, and to-night you make a spoon
or spoil a horn. Sabe?”
I understood and approved. As
we jogged along homeward, Esther and I fell to the
rear, and I outlined my programme. Nor did she
protest when I suggested that to-night was the accepted
time. Before we reached the Vaux ranch every
little detail was arranged. There was a splendid
moon, and after supper she plead the necessity of
returning home. Meanwhile every cent my friends
possessed had been given me, and the two best horses
of Las Palomas were under saddle for the start.
Uncle Lance was arranging a big hunt for the morrow
with Tony Hunter and Don Pierre, when Esther took
leave of her friends, only a few of whom were cognizant
of our intended elopement.
With fresh mounts under us, we soon
covered the intervening distance between the two ranches.
I would gladly have waived touching at the McLeod
ranch, but Esther had torn her dress during the day
and insisted on a change, and I, of necessity, yielded.
The corrals were at some distance from the main buildings,
and, halting at a saddle shed adjoining, Esther left
me and entered the house. Fortunately her mother
had retired, and after making a hasty change of apparel,
she returned unobserved to the corrals. As we
quietly rode out from the inclosure, my spirits soared
to the moon above us. The night was an ideal one.
Crossing the Frio, we followed the divide some distance,
keeping in the open, and an hour before midnight forded
the Nueces at Shepherd’s. A flood of recollections
crossed my mind, as our steaming horses bent their
heads to drink at the ferry. Less than a year
before, in this very grove, I had met her; it was
but two months since, on those hills beyond, we had
gathered flowers, plighted our troth, and exchanged
our first rapturous kiss. And the thought that
she was renouncing home and all for my sake, softened
my heart and nerved me to every exertion.
Our intention was to intercept the
south-bound stage at the first road house south of
Oakville. I knew the hour it was due to leave
the station, and by steady riding we could connect
with it at the first stage stand some fifteen miles
below. Lighthearted and happy, we set out on
this last lap of our ride. Our horses seemed to
understand the emergency, as they put the miles behind
them, thrilling us with their energy and vigor.
Never for a moment in our flight did my sweetheart
discover a single qualm over her decision, while in
my case all scruples were buried in the hope of victory.
Recrossing the Nueces and entering the stage road,
we followed it down several miles, sighting the stage
stand about two o’clock in the morning.
I was saddle weary from the hunt, together with this
fifty-mile ride, and rejoiced in reaching our temporary
destination. Esther, however, seemed little the
worse for the long ride.
The welcome extended by the keeper
of this relay station was gruff enough. But his
tone and manner moderated when he learned we were
passengers for Corpus Christi. When I made arrangements
with him to look after our horses for a week or ten
days at a handsome figure, he became amiable, invited
us to a cup of coffee, and politely informed us that
the stage was due in half an hour. But on its
arrival, promptly on time, our hearts sank within
us. On the driver’s box sat an express guard
holding across his knees a sawed-off, double-barreled
shotgun. As it halted, two other guards stepped
out of the coach, similarly armed. The stage
was carrying an unusual amount of treasure, we were
informed, and no passengers could be accepted, as
an attempted robbery was expected between this and
the next station.
Our situation became embarrassing.
For the first time during our ride, Esther showed
the timidity of her sex. The chosen destination
of our honeymoon, nearly a hundred miles to the south,
was now out of the question. To return to Oakville,
where a sister and friends of my sweetheart resided,
seemed the only avenue open. I had misgivings
that it was unsafe, but Esther urged it, declaring
that Mrs. Martin would offer no opposition, and even
if she did, nothing now could come that would ever
separate us. We learned from the keeper that Jack
Martin was due to drive the north-bound stage out
of Oakville that morning, and was expected to pass
this relay station about daybreak. This was favorable,
and we decided to wait and allow the stage to pass
north before resuming our journey.
On the arrival of the stage, we learned
that the down coach had been attacked, but the robbers,
finding it guarded, had fled after an exchange of
shots in the darkness. This had a further depressing
effect on my betrothed, and only my encouragement
to be brave and face the dilemma confronting us kept
her up. Bred on the frontier, this little ranch
girl was no weakling; but the sudden overturn of our
well-laid plans had chilled my own spirits as well
as hers. Giving the up stage a good start of
us, we resaddled and started for Oakville, slightly
crestfallen but still confident. In the open air
Esther’s fears gradually subsided, and, invigorated
by the morning and the gallop, we reached our destination
after our night’s adventure with hopes buoyant
and colors flying.
Mrs. Martin looked a trifle dumfounded
at her early callers, but I lost no time in informing
her that our mission was an elopement, and asked her
approval and blessing. Surprised as she was, she
welcomed us to breakfast, inquiring of our plans and
showing alarm over our experience. Since Oakville
was a county seat where a license could be secured,
for fear of pursuit I urged an immediate marriage,
but Mrs. Martin could see no necessity for haste.
There was, she said, no one there whom she would allow
to solemnize a wedding of her sister, and, to my chagrin,
Esther agreed with her.
This was just what I had dreaded;
but Mrs. Martin, with apparent enthusiasm over our
union, took the reins in her own hands, and decided
that we should wait until Jack’s return, when
we would all take the stage to Pleasanton, where an
Episcopal minister lived. My heart sank at this,
for it meant a delay of two days, and I stood up and
stoutly protested. But now that the excitement
of our flight had abated, my own Esther innocently
sided with her sister, and I was at my wit’s
end. To all my appeals, the sisters replied with
the argument that there was no hurry—that
while the hunt lasted at the Vaux ranch Tony Hunter
could be depended upon to follow the hounds; Esther
would never be missed until his return; her mother
would suppose she was with the Vaux girls, and would
be busy preparing a lecture against her return.
Of course the argument of the sisters
won the hour. Though dreading some unforeseen
danger, I temporarily yielded. I knew the motive
of the hunt well enough to know that the moment we
had an ample start it would be abandoned, and the
Las Palomas contingent would return to the ranch.
Yet I dare not tell, even my betrothed, that there
were ulterior motives in my employer’s hunting
on the Frio, one of which was to afford an opportunity
for our elopement. Full of apprehension and alarm,
I took a room at the village hostelry, for I had our
horses to look after, and secured a much-needed sleep
during the afternoon. That evening I returned
to the Martin cottage, to urge again that we carry
out our original programme by taking the south-bound
stage at midnight. But all I could say was of
no avail. Mrs. Martin was equal to every suggestion.
She had all the plans outlined, and there was no occasion
for me to do any thinking at all. Corpus Christi
was not to be considered for a single moment, compared
to Pleasanton and an Episcopalian service. What
could I do?
At an early hour Mrs. Martin withdrew.
The reaction from our escapade had left a pallor on
my sweetheart’s countenance, almost alarming.
Noticing this, I took my leave early, hoping that a
good night’s rest would restore her color and
her spirits. Returning to the hostelry, I resignedly
sought my room, since there was nothing I could do
but wait. Tossing and pitching on my bed, I upbraided
myself for having returned to Oakville, where any
interference with our plans could possibly develop.
The next morning at breakfast, I noticed
that I was the object of particular attention, and
of no very kindly sort. No one even gave me a
friendly nod, while several avoided my glances.
Supposing that some rumor of our elopement might be
abroad, I hurriedly finished my meal and started for
the Martins’. On reaching the door, I was
met by its mistress, who, I had need to remind myself,
was the sister of my betrothed. To my friendly
salutation, she gave me a scornful, withering look.
“You’re too late, young
man,” she said. “Shortly after you
left last night, Esther and Jack Oxenford took a private
conveyance for Beeville, and are married before this.
You Las Palomas people are slow. Old Lance Lovelace
thought he was playing it cute San Jacinto Day, but
I saw through his little game. Somebody must
have told him he was a matchmaker. Well, just
give him my regards, and tell him he don’t know
the first principles of that little game. Tell
him to drop in some time when he’s passing;
I may be able to give him some pointers that I’m
not using at the moment. I hope your sorrow will
not exceed my happiness. Good-morning, sir.”