THE PROMISED LAND
There was no thought of submission
in Alcatraz at this moment, though never for an instant
did he under-rate the power of man. To Alcatraz
the Mexican was the type, and Cordova had seemed to
unite in himself many powers—strength like
a herd of bulls, endurance greater than the contemptible
patience of the burro, speed like the lightning which
winks in the sky one instant and shatters the cottonwood
tree the next. Such as he were men, creatures
who conquer for the sake of conquest and who torment
for the love of pain. His fear equalled his hatred,
and his hatred made him shake with fever.
The horseman had vanished but it was
not well to trust to mere distance. Had he not
heard, more than once, the gun speaking from the hand
of Cordova, and presently the wounded hawk fluttered
out of the sky and dropped at the feet of the man?
So Alcatraz kept on running. Besides, he rejoiced
in the gallop. He was like a boy who leaves his
strength untested for several years and when the crisis
comes finds himself a man. So the red-chestnut
marvelled at the new wells of strength which he was
draining as he ran. That power which the Mexican
had kept at low tide with his systematic brutality
was now developed to the full, very near; and to Alcatraz
it seemed exhaustless. He did not stop to look
about until two miles of climbing up the steep sides
of the Eagles had winded him.
He had risen above the foothills and
the more laborious slopes of the Eagles lifted at
angles sheer and more sheer towards the top. But
decidedly he must cross the mountains. On the
other side perhaps, there would be no men. There
could be no better time. Already the hollow gorges
were beginning to brim with blue-grey shadows and he
would be taking the worst of the climb in the cool
of the evening. So Alcatraz gave himself to the
climb.
It was bitter work. Had he dropped
a few miles south across the foothills he would have
found the road to the Jordan ranch climbing up the
Eagles with leisurely swinging curves, but the slopes
just above him were heart-breaking, and Alcatraz began
to realize in an hour that a mountainside from a distance
is a far gentler thing than the same slope underfoot.
It was the heart of twilight before he came to the
middle of his climb and stepped onto a nearly level
shoulder some acres in compass. Here he stood
for a moment while the muscles, cramped from climbing,
loosened again, and he looked down at the work he had
already accomplished. It was a dizzy fall to
the lowlands. The big foothills were mere dimples
on the earth and limitless plain moved east towards
darkness. The stallion breathed deep of the pure
mountain air, contented. All his old life lay
low beneath him in a thicker air and in a deeper night.
He had climbed out of it to a lonely height, perhaps,
but a free one. The wind, coming off the mountain
top, curled his tail along his flank. He turned
and put his head into it, already refreshed for more
climbing. There was a strange scent in that wind,
a rank, keen odor that would have stopped him instantly
had he been wiser in the life of the wilderness.
As it was, he trotted on through a skirting of shrubbery
and on the verge of a clearing was stopped by a snarl
that rolled out of the ground at his feet. Then
he saw a dead deer on the ground and over it a great
tawny creature. One paw lay on the flank of its
prey; the bloody muzzle was just above.
There is no greater coward than the
puma. Ordinarily she would have hesitated before
attacking the grown horse, but the surprise made her
desperate. She sprang even as Alcatraz whirled
for flight, and in whirling he saw that there was
no escape from the leap of this monster with the yawning
teeth. He kicked high and hard, eleven hundred
pounds of seasoned muscle concentrated in the drive.
The blow would have smashed in the side of a bull.
One hoof glanced off, but the other struck fair and
full between the eyes of the mountain-lion. The
great cat spun backwards, screeching, but Alcatraz
saw no more than the fall. He fled up the mountain
with fear of death lightening his strides, regardless
of footing, crashing through underbrush, and came to
the end of his hysterical flight at the crest of the
slope.
There he paused, shaking and weak,
but the mountain top was bare of covert, and scanning
it eagerly through the treacherous moonlight he saw
there was no immediate danger. Down the Western
slopes he saw a fairyland for horses. Far beyond
rose a second range nearly as lofty as the peak on
which he stood, but in between tumbled rolling ground,
a dreamy panorama in the moonshine. One feature
was clear, and that was a broad looping of silver
among the hills, a river with slender tributaries
dodging swiftly down to it from either side. Alcatraz
looked with a swelling heart, thinking of the white-hot
deserts which he had known all his life. The
wind which lifted his mane and cooled his hot body
carried up, also, the delicious fragrance of the evergreens
and it seemed to Alcatraz that he had come in view
of a promised land. Surely he had dreamed of
it on many a day in burning, dusty corrals or in oven-like
sheds.
The descent was far less precipitous
than the climb and far shorter to the plateau.
Just where the true mountains broke out into a pleasant
medley of foothills, the stallion stopped to rest.
He nibbled a few mouthfuls of grass growing lush and
rank on the edge of a watercourse, waded to the knees
in a still pool and blotted out the star-images with
the disturbance of his drinking, and then went back
onto a hilltop to sleep.
It was full day before he rose and
started on again, and to keep his strength for the
next stage of the journey, he ate busily first on the
lee side of a hill where the grass was thickest and
tenderest. Between mouthfuls he raised his head
to gaze down on his new-found land. It was a
day of clouds, thin sheetings and dense cumulus masses
sweeping on the west wind and breaking against the
mountains. Alcatraz could not see the crests
over which he had climbed the night before, so thick
were those breaking ranks of clouds, but the plateau
beneath him was dotted with yellow sunshine and in
the day it filled to the full the promise of the moonlit
night. He saw wide stretches of meadow; he saw
hills sharpsided and smoothly rolling—places
to climb with labor and places to gallop at ease.
He saw streams that promised drink at will; he saw
clumps and groves of trees for shelter from sun or
storm. All that a horse could will was here,
beyond imaginings. Alcatraz lifted his beautiful
head and neighed across the lowlands.
There was no answer. His kingdom
silently awaited his coming so he struck out at a
sharp pace. The run of the day before, in place
of stiffening him, had put him in racing trim and
he went like the wind. He was in playful mood.
He danced and shied as each cloud-shadow struck him,
a dim figure in the shade but shining red-chestnut
in the sun patches. On every hand he saw dozens
of places where he would have stopped willingly had
not more distant beauties lured him on. There
were hills whose tops would serve him as watch towers
in time of need. There were meadows of soft soil
where the grass grew long and rank and others where
it was a sweeter and finer growth; but both had their
places in his diet and must be remembered so Alcatraz
tried to file them away in his mind. But who
could remember single jewels in a great treasure?
He was like a child chasing butterflies and continually
lured from the pursuit of one to that of another still
brighter. So he came in his kingly progress to
the first blot on the landscape, the first bar, the
first hindrance.
Sinuous and swift curving as a snake
it twisted over hilltops and dipped across hollows,
three streaks of silver light one above the other,
and endless. The ears of Alcatraz flattened.
He knew barb-wire fences of old and he knew they meant
man and domination of man. The scars of whip and
spur stung him afresh. The old sullen hatred rose
in him. Those three elusive lines of light were
stronger than he, he knew, just as the frail body
of a man contained a mysterious strength far greater
than his. He turned his head across the wind
and galloped beside the new-strung fence for ten breathless
minutes. Then he paused, panting. Still running
endless before him and behind was the fence and now
he saw a checking of similar fences across the meadows
to his right. More than that, he saw a group
of fat cattle browzing, and just beyond were horses
in a pasture.
Alcatraz slipped backwards and sideways
till he was out of sight and then galloped over the
hill until he came to a grove of trees at the top.
Here he paused to continue his examination from shelter.
The fence was the work of man, the cattle and horses
were the possessions of man, and far off to the left,
out of a grove of trees, rose the smoke which spoke
of the presence of man himself. The chestnut shivered
as though he were shaking cold water off his hide,
and then unreasoning fury gripped him. For here
was his paradise, his Promised Land, pre-empted by
the Great Enemy!
He stayed for a long moment gazing,
and then turned reluctantly and fled like one pursued
back by the way he had come. He got beyond the
fence in the course of half an hour, but still he
kept on. He began to feel that as long as he
galloped on land which was pleasant to him it would
be pleasant to man also. So he kept steadily
on his way, leaping the brooks. Into the river
he cast himself and swam to the farther shore.
There was an instant change beyond that bank.
The valley opened like a fan. The handle of it
was the green, well-watered plateau into which he
had first descended, but now it spread in raw colored
desert, cut up by ragged hills here and there, and
extending on either side to mountains purple-blue
with distance.
With the water dripping from his belly,
Alcatraz twinked a farewell glance to the green country
behind him and set his face towards the desert.
It was not so hard to leave the pleasant meadows.
Now that he knew they were man-owned there was a taint
in their beauty, and here on the sands of the desert
with only dusty bunch-grass to eat and muddy waterholes
to drink from, he was at least free from the horror
of the enemy. He kept on fairly steadily, nibbling
in the bunch-grass as he went, now trotting a little,
now cantering lightly across a stretch barren of forage.
So he came, just after noonday, down-wind from the
scent of horses.
His own kind, yet he was worried,
for he connected horses inevitably with the thought
of man. Nevertheless, he decided to explore, and
coming warily over a rise of ground he saw, in the
hollow beyond, a whole troop of horses without a man
in sight. He was too wise to jump to conclusions
but slipped back from his watch-post and ran in a long
semi-circle about the herd, but having made out that
there was no cowpuncher nearby, he came back to his
original place of vantage and resumed his observations.
A beautiful black stallion wandered
up-wind from the rest and another, younger horse,
was on the other side of the herd. Between was
a raggedly assembled group of mares old and young,
with leggy yearlings, deer-footed colts, and more
than one time-worn stallion. It was a motley
assembly. The colors ranged from piebald to grey
and there was a great diversity in stature. Presently
the black stallion neighed softly, whereat the rest
of the herd bunched closely together, the mares with
the foals on the side, and all heads turning towards
the black who now galloped to a hilltop, surveyed
the horizon and presently dropped his head to graze
again.
This was a signal to the others.
They spread out again carelessly, but Alcatraz was
beginning to put two and two together in his thoughts.
The two stallions were obviously guards, but what
should they be guarding against in the broad light
of day except that terrible destroyer who hunts as
well at noon as at midnight—man! Inspiration
came to Alcatraz. The difference of color and
stature, the unkempt manes and tails, the wild eyes,
were all telling a single story, now. These were
not servants to man, and since they were not his servants
they must be enemies, for that was the law of the
world. The great enemy dominated, and where he
could not dominate he killed. And the herd feared
the same power which Alcatraz feared; instantly they
became to him brothers and sisters, and he stepped
boldly into view.
The result was startling. From
the hilltop the black stallion whinnied shrill and
short and in a twinkling the whole group was in motion
scurrying north. Alcatraz looked in wonder and
saw the black fall in behind the rest and range across
the rear biting the flanks of older horses who found
it difficult to keep the hot pace. With this
accomplished and when the herd was stolidly compacted
before his driving, the black skirted around the whole
group and with a magnificent spurt of running placed
himself in the lead. He kept his place easily,
a strong galloping grey mare at his hip, and from time
to time tossed his head to the side to take stock
of his followers. And so they dipped out of sight
beyond the next swell of ground.
Alcatraz recovered from his amazement
to start in pursuit. This was a mystery worth
solving. Moreover, the moment he made sure that
these were not man-owned creatures they had become
inexplicably dear to him and as they disappeared his
heart grew heavy. His running gait carried him
quickly in view. They had slackened in their flight
a little but as he hove in sight again they took the
alarm once more, the foals first rushing to the front
and then the whole herd with flying manes and tails
blown straight out.
It was a goodly sight to Alcatraz.
Moreover, his heart leaped strangely, as it always
did when he saw horses in full gallop. Perhaps
they were striving to test his speed of foot before
they admitted him to their company. In that case
the answer was soon given. He sent his call after
them, bidding them watch a real horse run, then overtook
them in one dizzy burst of sprinting. His rush
carried him not only up to them but among them.
Two or three youngsters swerved aside with frightened
snorts, but as he came up behind a laboring mare she
paused in her flight to let drive with both heels.
Alcatraz barely escaped the danger with a sidestep
light as a dancer’s and shortened his gallop.
He could not punish the mare for her
impudence; besides, he needed time to rearrange his
thoughts. Why should they flee from a companion
who intended no harm? It was a great puzzle.
In the meantime, keeping easily at the heels of the
wild horses, he noted that they were holding their
pace better than any cowponies he had ever seen running.
From the oldest mare to the youngest foal they seemed
to have one speed afoot.
A neigh from the black leader made
the herd scatter on every side like fire in stubble.
Alcatraz halted to catch the meaning of this new maneuver
and saw the black approaching at a high-stepping trot
as one determined to explore a danger but ready to
instantly flee if it seemed a serious threat.
His gaze was fixed not on Alcatraz but on the far
horizon where the hills became a blue mist rolling
softly against the sky. He seemed to make up
his mind, presently, that nothing would follow the
chestnut out of the distance and he began to move about
Alcatraz in a rapid gallop, constantly narrowing his
circle.
Alcatraz turned constantly to meet
him, whinnying a friendly greeting, but the black
paid not the slightest heed to these overtures.
At length he came to a quivering stand twenty yards
away, head up, ears back, a very statue of an angry
and proud horse. Obviously it was a challenge,
but Alcatraz was too happy in his new-found brothers
to think of battle. He ducked his head a little
and pawed the ground lightly, a horse’s age-old
manner of expressing amicable intentions. But
there was nothing amicable in the black leader.
He reared a little and came down lightly on his forefeet,
his weight gathered on his haunches as though he were
preparing to charge, and at this unmistakable evidence
of ill-will, Alcatraz snorted and grew alert.
If it came to fighting he was more
than at home. He was a master. More than
one corral gate he had cunningly worked ajar, and more
than one flimsy barn wall he had broken down with
his leaning shoulder, and more than one fence he had
leaped to get at the horses beyond. With anger
rising in him he took stock of the opponent. The
black lacked a good inch of his own height but in
substance more than made up for the deficiency.
He was a stalwart eight-year old, muscled like a Hercules,
with plenty of bone to stand his weight; and his eyes,
glittering through the tangle of forelock, gave him
an air of savage cunning. Decidedly here was
a foeman worthy of his steel, thought Alcatraz.
He looked about him. There stood the mares and
the horses ranged in a loose semi-circle, waiting
and watching; only the colts, ignorant of what was
to come, had begun to frolic together or bother their
mothers with a savage pretense of battle. Alcatraz
saw one solid old bay topple her offspring with a
side-swing of her head. She wanted an unobstructed
view of the fight.
His interest in this by-play nearly
proved his undoing for while his head was turned he
heard a rushing of hoofs and barely had time to throw
himself to one side as the black flashed by him.
Alcatraz turned and reared to beat the insolent stranger
into the earth but he found that the leader was truly
different from the sluggish horses of men. A
hundred wild battles had taught the black every trick
of tooth and heel; and in the thick of the fight he
carried his weight with the agility of a cat:
Alcatraz had not yet swung himself fairly back on his
haunches when the black was upon him, the dust flying
up behind from the quickness of his turn. Straight
at the throat of the chestnut he dived and his teeth
closed on the throat of Alcatraz just where the neck
narrows beneath the jaw. His superior height enabled
Alcatraz to rear and fling himself clear, but his
throat was bleeding when he landed on all fours dancing
with rage and the sting of his wounds. Yet he
refrained from rushing; he had been in too many a fight
to charge blindly.
The black, however, had tasted victory,
and came again with a snort of eagerness. It
was the thing for which Alcatraz had been waiting and
he played a trick which he had learned long before
from a cunning old gelding who, on a day, had given
him a bitter fight. He pitched back, as though
he were about to rear to meet the charge, but when
his fore-feet were barely clear of the ground he rocked
down again, whirled, and lashed out with his heels.
Had they landed fairly the battle
would have ended in that instant, but the black was
cat-footed indeed, and he swerved in time to save his
head. Even so one flashing heel had caught his
shoulder and ripped it open like a knife. And
they both sprang away, ready for the next clash.
The grey mare who had run so gallantly at the hip of
the leader now approached and stood close by with
pricking ears. Alcatraz bared his teeth as he
glanced aside at her. No doubt if he were knocked
sprawling she would rush in to help her lord and master
finish the enemy. That gave Alcatraz a second
problem—to fight the stallion without turning
his back on the treacherous mare.
Before he could plan his next move
the black was at him again. This time they reared
together, met with a clash of teeth and rapid beat
of hoofs, and parted on equal terms. Alcatraz
eyed his enemy with a fierce respect. His head
was dull and ringing with the blows; his shoulder had
been slightly cut by a glancing forehoof. Decidedly
he could not meet the brawn of this hardened old warrior
on such terms. He had used up one trick, he must
find another, and still another; and when the black
rushed again, Alcatraz slipped away from the contact
and raced off at his matchless gallop. The other
pursued a short distance and stopped, sounding his
defiance and his triumph. As well follow the wind
as the chestnut stranger. Besides, the blood
was pouring from the gash in his shoulder and that
foreleg was growing weak; it was well that the battle
had ended at this point.
But it was not ended! Flight
was not in the mind of Alcatraz as he swept away.
He ran in dodging circles about the enemy, swerving
in and then veering sharply out as the black reared
to meet the expected charge. Whatever else was
accomplished, he had gained the initiative and that
plus his lightness of foot might bring matters to a
decisive issue in his favor. Twice he made his
rush; twice the black turned and met him with that
shower of crushing blows with the fore hoofs.
But the third time a feint at one side and a charge
at the other took the leader unawares. Fair and
true the shoulder of Alcatraz struck him on the side
and the impact flung the black heavily to the earth.
The shock had staggered even Alcatraz but he was at
the other like a savage terrier. Thrice he stamped
across that struggling body until the black lay motionless
with his coat crimson from twenty slashes. Then
Alcatraz drew away and neighed his triumph, and in
his exultation he noted that the herd drew close together
at his call.
Why, he could not imagine, and he
had no time to ponder on it, for the black was now
struggling to his feet. But there was no fight
left in him. He stood dazed, with fallen head,
and to the challenge of the chestnut he replied by
not so much as the pricking of his flagging ears.
The grey mare went to him, touched
noses with her overlord, and then backed away, shaking
her head. Presently she trotted past Alcatraz,
flung up her heels within an inch of his head, and
then galloped on towards the herd looking back at
the conqueror. Oh vanity of the weaker sex; oh
frailty! She had seen her master crushed and within
the minute she was flirting with the conqueror.
The herd started off as the grey joined
them and Alcatraz followed; the black leader remaining
unmoving and the blood dripped steadily down his legs.