of closely packed cows and calves.
The automobile swept around the beef herd and drew to a halt between
it and the noisier one beyond. In a fire of mesquite wood
branding-irons were heating. Several men were busy branding and
marking the calves dragged to them from the herd by the horsemen
who were roping the frightened little blatters.
It was a day beautiful even for Arizona. The winey air called potently
to the youth in the girl. Such a sky, such atmosphere, so much life and
color! She could not sit still any longer. With a movement of her wrist
she opened the door and stepped down from the car.
A man sitting beside the chauffeur turned in his seat. "You'd better stay
where you are, honey." He had an idea that this was not exactly the
scene a girl of seventeen ought to see at close range.
"I want to get the kinks out of my muscles, Dad," the girl called back.
"I'll not go far."
She walked along a ridge that ran from the mesa into the valley like an
outstretched tongue. Her hands were in the pockets of her fawn-colored
coat. There was a touch of unstudied jauntiness in the way the tips of
her golden curls escaped from beneath the little brown toque she wore.
A young man guarding the beef herd watched her curiously. She moved
with the untamed, joyous freedom of a sun-worshiper just emerging
from the morning of the world. Something in the poise of the light,
boyish figure struck a spark from his imagination.
A vaquero was cantering toward the fire with a calf in his wake.
Another cowpuncher dropped the loop of his lariat on the ground, gave
it a little upward twist as the calf passed over it, jerked taut the riata,
and caught the animal by the hind leg. In a moment the victim lay
stretched on the ground. In the gathering gloom the girl could not quite
make out what the men were doing. To her sensitive nostrils drifted an
acrid odor of burnt hair and flesh, the wail of an animal in pain. One of
the men was using his knife on the ears of the helpless creature. She
heard another say something about a crop and an underbit. Then she
turned away, faint and indignant. Three big men torturing a month-old
calf--was this the brave outdoor West she had read about and
remembered from her childhood days? Tears of pity and resentment
blurred her sight.
As she stood on the spit of the ridge, a slim, light figure silhouetted
against the skyline, the young man guarding the beef herd called
something to her that was lost in the bawling of the cattle. From the
motion of his hand she knew that he was telling her to get back to the
car. But the girl saw no reason for obeying the orders of a range-rider
she had never seen before and never expected to see again. Nobody had
ever told her that a rider is fairly safe among the wildest hill cattle, but
a man on foot is liable to attack at any time when a herd is excited.
She turned her shoulder a little more definitely to the man who had
warned her and looked across the parada grounds to the hills
swimming in a haze of violet velvet. Her heart throbbed to a keen
delight in them, as it might have done at the touch of a dear friend's
hand long absent. For she had been born in the Rockies. They belonged
to her and she to them. Long years in New York had left her still an
alien.
A shout of warning startled her. Above the bellowing of the herd she
heard another yell.
"Hi-yi-ya-a!"
A red-eyed steer, tail up, was crashing through the small brush toward
the branders. There was a wild scurry for safety. The men dropped iron
and ropes and fled to their saddles. Deflected by pursuers, the animal
turned. By chance it thundered straight for the girl on the sand spit.
She stood paralyzed for a moment.
Out of the gathering darkness a voice came to her sharp and clear.
"Don't move!" It rang so vibrant with crisp command that the girl,
poised for flight, stood still and waited in white terror while the huge
steer lumbered toward her.
A cowpony, wheeled as on a dollar, jumped to an instant gallop. The
man riding it was the one who had warned her back to the car. Horse
and ladino pounded over the ground toward her. Each stride brought
them closer to each other as they converged toward the sand spit. It
came to her with a gust of panicky despair that they would collide on
the very spot where she stood.
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