Long narrow flats, gray with grass
and dotted with patches of greasewood, and lined by low bare ridges of
yellow rock, stretched away from him, leading toward the yellow peak
that seemed never to be gained upon.
Shefford had pictures in his mind, pictures of stone walls and wild
valleys and domed buttes, all of which had been painted in colorful
and vivid words by his friend Venters. He believed he would recognize
the distinctive and remarkable landmarks Venters had portrayed, and he
was certain that he had not yet come upon one of them. This was his
second lonely day of travel and he had grown more and more susceptible
to the influence of horizon and the different prominent points. He
attributed a gradual change in his feelings to the loneliness and the
increasing wildness. Between Tuba and Flagstaff he had met Indians
and an occasional prospector and teamster. Here he was alone, and
though he felt some strange gladness, he could not help but see the
difference.
He rode on during the gray, lowering, chilly day, and toward evening
the clouds broke in the west, and a setting sun shone through the
rift, burnishing the desert to red and gold. Shefford’s instinctive
but deadened love of the beautiful in nature stirred into life, and
the moment of its rebirth was a melancholy and sweet one. Too late
for the artist’s work, but not too late for his soul!
For a place to make camp he halted near a low area of rock that lay
like an island in a sea of grass. There was an abundance of dead
greasewood for a camp-fire, and, after searching over the rock, he
found little pools of melted snow in the depressions. He took off
the saddle and pack, watered his horse, and, hobbling him as well as
his inexperience permitted, he turned him loose on the grass.
Then while he built a fire and prepared a meal the night came down
upon him. In the lee of the rock he was well sheltered from the wind,
but the air, was bitter cold. He gathered all the dead greasewood in
the vicinity, replenished the fire, and rolled in his blanket, back to
the blaze. The loneliness and the coyotes did not bother him this
night. He was too tired and cold. He went to sleep at once and did
not awaken until the fire died out. Then he rebuilt it and went to
sleep again. Every half-hour all night long he repeated this, and
was glad indeed when the dawn broke.
The day began with misfortune. His horse was gone; it had been stolen,
or had worked out of sight, or had broken the hobbles and made off.
From a high stone ridge Shefford searched the grassy flats and slopes,
all to no purpose. Then he tried to track the horse, but this was
equally futile. He had expected disasters, and the first one did not
daunt him. He tied most of his pack in the blanket, threw the canteen
across his shoulder, and set forth, sure at least of one thing–that he
was a very much better traveler on foot than on horseback.
Walking did not afford him the leisure to study the surrounding
country; however, from time to time, when he surmounted a bench he
scanned the different landmarks that had grown familiar. It took
hours of steady walking to reach and pass the yellow peak that had
been a kind of goal. He saw many sheep trails and horse tracks in
the vicinity of this mountain, and once he was sure he espied an
Indian watching him from a bold ridge-top.
The day was bright and warm, with air so clear it magnified objects he
knew to be far away. The ascent was gradual; there were many narrow
flats connected by steps; and the grass grew thicker and longer. At
noon Shefford halted under the first cedar-tree, a lonely, dwarfed
shrub that seemed to have had a hard life. From this point the rise
of ground was more perceptible, and straggling cedars led the eye on
to a purple slope that merged into green of pinyon and pine. Could
that purple be the sage Venters had so feelingly described, or was it
merely the purple of deceiving distance? Whatever it might be, it
gave Shefford a thrill and made him think of the strange, shy, and
lovely woman Venters had won out here in this purple-sage country.
He calculated that he had ridden thirty miles the day before and had
already traveled ten miles today, and therefore could hope to be in
the pass before night. Shefford resumed his journey with too much
energy and enthusiasm to think of being tired. And he discovered
presently that the straggling cedars and the slope beyond were much
closer than he had judged them to be. He reached the sage to find it
gray instead of purple.
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