Dorn Of The Mountains (32 page)

Las Vegas reached for his friend as a drowning man might have reached for solid rock.

“Roy, can you really marry them…with my Bible…and the ser vice of my church?” asked Helen, a happy hope flushing her face.

“Wal, indeed I can. I’ve married more’n one couple whose religion wasn’t mine.”

“B-b-before…d-d-din-ner!” burst out Las Vegas, like a stuttering idiot.

“I reckon. Come on, now, an’ make yourself pre-sent-tible,” said Roy. “Miss Helen, you tell Bo thet it’s all settled.”

He picked up the halter on the blue mustang, and turned away toward the corrals. Las Vegas put the bridle of his horse over his arm, and seemed to be following in a trance, with his dazed rapt face held high.

“Bring Dorn!” called Helen softly after them.

So it came about as naturally as it was wonderful that Bo rode the blue mustang before the afternoon ended.

Las Vegas disobeyed his first orders from Mrs. Tom Carmichael and rode out after her toward the green rising range. Helen seemed impelled to follow. She did not need to ask Dorn the second time. They rode swiftly but never caught up with Bo and Las Vegas, whose riding resembled their happiness.

Dorn read Helen’s mind, or else his own thoughts were in harmony with hers, for he always seemed to speak what she was thinking. And as they rode homeward, he asked her in his quiet way if they could not spare a few days to visit his old camp.

“And take Bo…and Tom? Oh, of all things I’d like to,” she replied.

“Yes…an’ Roy, too,” added Dorn significantly.

“Of course,” said Helen lightly, as if she had not caught his meaning. But she turned her eyes away, while her heart thumped disgracefully, and all her body was aglow. “Will Tom and Bo go?”

“It was Tom who got me to ask you,” replied Dorn. “John an’ Hal can look after the men while we’re gone.”

“Oh…so Tom put it in your head? I guess…maybe…I won’t go.”

“It is always in my mind, Nell,” he said with his slow seriousness. “I’m goin’ to work all my life for you. But I’ll want to an’ need to go back to the woods often.…An’ if you stoop to marry me…an’ make me the richest of men…you’ll have to marry me up there where I fell in love with you.”


Ah!
Did Las Vegas Tom Carmichael say that, too?” inquired Helen softly.

“Nell, do you want to know what Las Vegas said?”

“By all means.”

“He said this…an’ not an hour ago…‘Milt, old hoss, let me give you a hunch. I’m a man of family now…an’ I’ve been a devil with the wimmin in my day. I can see through ‘em. Don’t you marry Nell Rayner in or near the house where I killed Beasley. She’d remember. An’ don’t let her remember thet day. Go off into the woods. Paradise Park! Bo an’ me will go with you.’ ”

Helen gave him her hand while they walked the horses homeward in the long sunset shadows. In the fullness of that happy hour she had time for a grateful wonder at the keen penetration of the cowboy Carmichael. Dorn had saved her life, but it was Las Vegas who had saved her happiness.

Not many days later, when again the afternoon shadows were slanting low, Helen rode out upon the promontory where the dim trail zigzagged far above Paradise Park.

Roy was singing as he drove the pack burros down the slope. Bo and Las Vegas were trying to ride the trail two abreast so they could hold hands; Dorn had dismounted to stand beside Helen’s horse, as she gazed down the shaggy black slopes to the beautiful wild park with its gray meadows and shining ribbons of brooks.

It was July and there were no golden red flames and blazes of color such as lingered in Helen’s memory. Black spruce slopes and green pines and white streaks of aspens and lacy waterfall of foam and dark outcroppings of rock—these colors and forms greeted her gaze with all the old enchantment. Wildness, beauty, and loneliness were there, the same as ever, immutable like the spirit of those heights.

Helen would fain have lingered longer, but the others called, and Ranger impatiently snorted his sense of the grass and water far below. And she knew that, when she climbed there again to the wide outlook, she would be another woman.

“Nell, come on,” said Dorn as he led on. “It’s better to look up.”

The sun had just sunk behind the ragged fringe of mountain rim when those three strong and efficient men of the open had pitched camp and had prepared a bountiful supper.

Then Roy Beeman took out the little worn Bible that Helen had given him to use when he married Bo, and, as he opened it, a light changed his dark face.

“Come, Helen an’ Dorn,” he said.

They arose to stand before him. And he married them there under the great stately pines, with the fragrant blue smoke curling upwards, and the wind singing through the branches, while the waterfall murmured its low soft dreamy music, and from the dark slope came the wild lonely cry of a wolf, full of the hunger for life and a mate.

“Let us pray,” said Roy, as he closed the Bible, and knelt with them.

“There is only one God, an’ Him I beseech in my humble office for the woman an’ man I have just wedded in holy bonds. Bless them an’ watch them an’ keep them through all the comin’ years. Bless the sons of this strong man of the woods an’ make them like him, with love an’ understandin’ of the source from which life comes. Bless the daughters of this woman an’ send with them more of her love an’ soul, which must be the softenin’ an’ the salvation of the hard West. Oh, Lord, blaze the dim dark trail for them through the unknown forest of life! Oh, Lord, lead the way across the naked range of the future no mortal knows! We ask in Thy name! Amen.”

When the preacher stood up again and raised the couple from their kneeling posture, it seemed that a grave and solemn personage had left him. This young man was again the dark-faced, clear-eyed Roy, droll and dry, with the enigmatic smile on his lips.

“Missus Dorn,” he said, taking her hands. “I wish you joy…. An’ now after this here, my crownin’ ser vice in your behalf…I reckon I’ll claim a reward.”

Then he kissed her. Bo came next with her warm and loving felicitations, and the cowboy, with characteristic action, also made at Helen.

“Nell, shore it’s the only chance I’ll ever have to kiss you,” he drawled. “Because when this heah big Indian once finds out what kissin’ is…!”

Las Vegas then proved how swift and hearty he could be upon occasions. All this left Helen red and confused and unutterably happy. She appreciated Dorn’s state. His eyes reflected the previous treasure that manifestly he saw, but realization of ownership had not yet become demonstrable.

Then with gay speech and happy laugh and silent look these five partook of the supper. When it was finished, Roy made known his intention to leave. They all protested and coaxed, but to no avail. He only laughed and went on saddling his horse.

“Roy, please stay,” implored Helen. “The day’s almost ended. You’re tired.”

“Nope. I’ll never be no third party when there’s only two!”

“But there are four of us.”

“Didn’t I just make you an’ Dorn one? An’, Missus Dorn, you forget I’ve been married often.”

Helen found herself confronted by an unanswerable side of the argument. Las Vegas rolled in the grass in his mirth. Dorn looked strange.

“Roy, then that’s why you’re so nice,” said Bo, with a little devil in her eyes. “Do you know I had my mind made up? If Tom hadn’t come around, I was going to make up to you, Roy…. I sure was…. What number wife would I have been?”

It always took Bo to turn the tables on anybody. Roy looked mightily embarrassed. And the laugh was on him. He did not face them again until he had mounted.

“Las Vegas, I’ve done my best for you…hitched you to that blue-eyed girl the best I knowed how,” he declared. “But I shore ain’t guaranteein’ nothin’! You’d better build a corral for her.”

“Why, Roy, you shore don’t savvy the way to break these wild ones,” drawled Las Vegas. “Bo will be eatin’ out of my hand in aboot a week.”

Bo’s blue eyes expressed an eloquent doubt as to this extraordinary claim.

“Good bye, friends,” said Roy, and rode away to disappear in the spruces.

Thereupon Bo and Las Vegas forgot Roy, and Dorn and Helen, the camp chores to be done, and everything else except themselves. Helen’s first wifely duty was to insist that she should and could and would help her husband with the work of cleaning up after the sumptuous supper. Before they had finished, a sound startled them. It came from Roy, evidently high on the darkening slope, and was a long mellow pealing “halloo” that rang on the cool air, burst the dreamy silence, and rapped across from slope to slope and cliff to cliff to lose its power and die away hauntingly in the distant recesses.

Dorn shook his head as if he did not care to attempt a reply to that beautiful call. Silence once again enfolded the park and twilight seemed to be born of the air, drifting downward.

“Nell, do you miss anythin’?” asked Dorn.

“No. Nothing in all the world,” she murmured. “I am happier than I ever dared pray to be.”

“I don’t mean people or things. I mean my pets.”


Ah!
I had forgotten…. Milt, where are they?”

“Gone back to the wild,” he said. “They had to live in my absence. An’ I’ve been away long.”

Just then the brooding silence, with its soft murmur of falling water and faint sigh of wind in the pines, was broken by a piercing scream, high, quivering, like that of a woman in exquisite agony.

“That’s Tom!” exclaimed Dorn.

“Oh…I was so…so frightened,” whispered Helen.

Bo came running, with Las Vegas at her heels.

“Milt, that was your tame cougar,” cried Bo excitedly. “Oh, I’ll never forget him! I’ll hear those cries in my dreams!”

“Yes, it was Tom,” said Dorn thoughtfully. “But I never heard him cry just like that.”

“Oh, call him in!”

Dorn whistled and called, but Tom did not come. Then the hunter stalked off into the gloom to call from different points under the slope. After a while he returned without the cougar. And at that moment from far up in the dark ravine drifted down the same wild cry, only changed by distance, strange and tragic in its meaning.

“He scented us. He remembers. But he’ll never come back,” said Dorn.

Helen felt stirred anew with convictions of Dorn’s deep knowledge of life and Nature. And her imagination seemed to have wings. How full and perfect her trust, her happiness in the realization that her love and her future, her children, and perhaps grandchildren, would come under the guidance of such a man! Only a little had she begun to comprehend the secrets of good and ill in their relation to the laws of Nature. Ages before men had lived on the earth, there had been the creatures of the wilderness, and the holes of the rocks and the nests of the trees, and rain, frost, heat, dew, sunlight, and night, storm and calm, the honey of the wild flower and the instinct of the bee—all the beautiful and multiple forms of life with their inscrutable design. To know something of them and to love them was to be close to the kingdom of earth—perhaps to the greater kingdom of heaven. For what ever breathed and moved was a part of that creation. The coo of the dove, the lichen on the mossy rock, the mourn of a hunting wolf, and the murmur of the waterfall, the ever-green and growing tips of the spruces and the thunderbolts along the battlements of the heights—these one and all must be actuated by the Great Spirit—that incalculable thing in the universe that had produced man and soul.

And there in the starlight, under the wide gnarled pines, sighing low with the wind, Helen sat with Dorn on the old stone that an avalanche of a million years past had flung from the rampart above to serve as camp table and bench for lovers in the wilderness. The sweet scent of spruce mingled with the fragrance of wood smoke, blown in their faces. How white the stars, and calm and true! How they blazed their single task! A coyote yelped off on the south slope, dark now as midnight. A bit of weathered rock rolled and tapped from shelf to shelf. And the wind moaned. Helen felt all the sadness and mystery and nobility of this lonely fastness, and full on her heart rested the supreme consciousness that all would someday be well with the troubled world beyond.

“Nell, I’ll homestead this park,” said Dorn. “Then it’ll always be ours.”

“Homestead! What’s that?” murmured Helen dreamily. The word sounded sweet.

“The government will give land to men who locate an’ build,” replied Dorn. “We’ll run up a log cabin.”

“And come here often.…Paradise Park,” whispered Helen.

Dorn’s first kisses were on her lips then, hard and cool and clean, like the life of the man, singularly exalting to her, completing her woman’s strange and unutterable joy of the hour, and rendering her mute.

Bo’s melodious laugh, and her voice, with its old mockery of torment, drifted softly on the night breeze. And the cow boy’s “
Aw
, Bo!” drawling his reproach and longing, was all that the tranquil waiting silence needed.

Paradise Park was living again one of its romances. Love was no stranger to that lonely vastness. Helen heard in the whisper of the wind through the pines the old earth story, beautiful, ever new and eternal. She thrilled to her depths. The spear-pointed spruces stood up, black and clear, against the noble stars. All that vast solitude breathed and waited, charged full with its secret, ready to reveal itself to her tremulous soul.

About the Author

Zane Grey™ was born Pearl Zane Gray at Zanesville, Ohio in 1872. He was graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1896 with a degree in dentistry. He practiced in New York City while striving to make a living by writing. He married Lina Elise Roth in 1905 and with her financial assistance he published his first novel himself,
Betty Zane
(1903). Closing his dental office, the Greys moved into a cottage on the Delaware River, near Lackawaxen, Pennsylvania. Grey took his first trip to Arizona in 1907 and, following his return, wrote
The Heritage of the Desert
(1910). The profound effect that the desert had had on him was so vibrantly captured that it still comes alive for a reader. Grey couldn’t have been more fortunate in his choice of a mate. Trained in En glish at Hunter College, Lina Grey proofread every manuscript Grey wrote, polished his prose, and later she managed their financial affairs. Grey’s early novels were serialized in pulp magazines, but by 1918 he had graduated to the slick magazine market. Motion picture rights brought in a fortune and, with 109 films based on his work, Grey set a record yet to be equaled by any other author. Zane Grey was not a realistic writer, but rather one who charted the interiors of the soul through encounters with the wilderness. He provided characters no less memorable than one finds in Balzac, Dickens, or Thomas Mann, and they have a vital story to tell. “There was so much unexpressed feeling that could not be entirely portrayed,” Loren Grey, Grey’s younger son and a noted psychologist, once recalled, “that, in later years, he would weep when rereading one of his own books.” Perhaps, too, closer to the mark, Zane Grey may have wept at how his attempts at being truthful to his muse had so often been essentially altered by his editors, so that no one might ever be able to read his stories as he had intended them. It may be said of Zane Grey that, more than mere adventure tales, he fashioned psycho-dramas about the odyssey of the human soul. If his stories seem not always to be of the stuff of the mundane world, without what his stories do touch, the human world has little meaning—which may go a long way to explain the hold he has had on an enraptured reading public ever since his first Western novel in 1910.

Other books

Capable of Honor by Allen Drury
Baghdad Central by Elliott Colla
Almost a Princess by Elizabeth Thornton
No Daughter of the South by Cynthia Webb
A More Perfect Heaven by Dava Sobel
The Key by Simon Toyne