Copper Streak Trail | Page 2

Eugene Manlove Rhodes
such a nose as Wellington loved.
It was broad at the base; deep creases ran from the corners of it,
flanking the white mustache, to a mouth strong, full-lipped and
undeniably large, ready alike for laughter or for sternness.
The nose--to follow the creases back again--was fleshy and beaked at
the tip; it narrowed at the level bridge and broadened again where it
joined the forehead, setting the eyes well apart. The eyes themselves
were blue, just a little faded--for the man was sixty-two--and there were
wind-puckers at the corners of them. But they were keen eyes, steady,
sparkling and merry eyes, for all that; they were deep-set and long, and
they sloped a trifle, high on the inside corners; pent in by
pepper-and-salt brows, bushy, tufted and thick, roguishly aslant from
the outer corners up to where they all but met above the Wellingtonian
nose. A merry face, a forceful face: Pete was a little man, five feet
seven, and rather slender than otherwise; but no one, in view of that
face, ever thought of him as a small man or an old one.
The faint path merged with another and another, the angles of
convergence giving the direction of the unknown water hole; they came
at last to the main trail, a trunk line swollen by feeders from every ridge
and arroyo. It bore away to the northeast, swerving, curving to pitch
and climb in faultless following of the rule of roads--the greatest
progress with the least exertion. Your cow is your best surveyor.
They came on the ranch suddenly, rounding a point into a small natural
amphitheater. A flat-roofed dugout, fronted with stone, was built into
the base of a boulder-piled hill; the door was open. Midnight perked his

black head jauntily and slanted an ear.
High overhead, a thicket of hackberry and arrow-weed overhung the
little valley. From this green tangle a pipe line on stilts broke away and
straddled down a headlong hill. Frost was unknown; the pipe was
supported by forked posts of height assorted to need, an expedient
easier than ditching that iron hillside. The water discharged into a
fenced and foursquare earthen reservoir; below it was a small corral of
cedar stakes; through the open gate, as he rode by, Pete saw a long
watering-trough with a float valve. Before the dugout stood a
patriarchal juniper, in the shade of which two saddled horses stood
droop-hipped, comfortably asleep. Waking, as Pete drew near, they
adjusted their disarray in some confusion and eyed the newcomers with
bright-eyed inquiry. Midnight, tripping by, hailed them with a civil
little whinny.
A tall, heavy man upreared himself from the shade. His example was
followed by another man, short and heavy. Blankets were spread on a
tarpaulin beyond them.
"'Light, stranger," said the tall man heartily. "Unsaddle and eat a small
snack. We was just taking a little noonday nap for ourselves."
"Beans, jerky gravy, and bread," announced the short man, waiter
fashion. "I'll hot up the coffee."
With the word he fed little sticks and splinters to a tiny fire, now almost
burned out, near the circumference of that shaded circle.
"Yes, to all that; thank you," said Pete, slipping off.
He loosened the cinches; so doing he caught from the corner of his eye
telegraphed tidings, as his two hosts rolled to each other a single
meaningful glance, swift, furtive, and white-eyed. Observing which,
every faculty of Pete Johnson's mind tensed, fiercely alert, braced to
attention.
"Now what? Some more of the same. Lights out! Protect yourself!" he

thought, taking off the saddle. Aloud he said:
"One of Zurich's ranches, isn't it? I saw ZK burned on the gateposts."
He passed his hand along Midnight's sweaty back for possible bruise or
scald; he unfolded the Navajo saddle blanket and spread it over the
saddle to dry. He took the sudaderos--the jute sweatcloths under the
Navajo--and draped them over a huge near-by boulder in the sun,
carefully smoothing them out to prevent wrinkles; to all appearance
without any other care on earth.
"Yes; horse camp," said the tall man. "Now you water the black horse
and I'll dig up a bait of corn for him. Wash up at the trough."
"Puesto que si!" said Pete.
He slipped the bit out of Midnight's mouth, pushing the headstall back
on the sleek black neck by way of lead rope, and they strode away to
the water pen, side by side.
When they came back a nose-bag, full of corn, stood ready near the fire.
Pete hung this on Midnight's head. Midnight munched contentedly,
with half-closed eyes, and Pete turned to the fire.
"Was I kidding myself?" he inquired. "Or did somebody mention the
name of grub?"
"Set up!" grinned the tall man, kicking a small box up beside a slightly
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