30,000 On the Hoof

30,000 On the Hoof by Zane Grey Page B

Book: 30,000 On the Hoof by Zane Grey Read Free Book Online
Authors: Zane Grey
Ads: Link
hell of a drive!... What happened to you, Luce?"
    "Oh, nothing--much," she answered, calling upon a sense of humour that eluded her.
    "But you look queer. And the wagon there--in the brush! But say, Luce, your face--it's all scratched."
    "That awful bull! He butted into the oxen. They ran off. Down here they turned off the road, hit a bank and pitched me into the brush."
    Logan leaped off to approach her with earnest solicitude. "You poor kid!
    I was afraid something had happened. I shouldn't have left you so far ahead. But are you hurt, dear?"
    "No. Only a scratch or two."
    "Thank God for that!" He shook his head in wonderment. "I can't get over how my luck holds." He ran to the wagon, then examined wheels and tongue and the oxen. Evidently no damage had been done, for he mounted the seat and with yells drove the oxen out of the brush.
    "All right. Come on, honey. Get up while I tie the horses behind... It won't be long now, Luce! Sycamore Canyon! My range! Our home!"
    Lucinda had lost her hopes and what little curiosity she might have had.
    Logan drove into the woods, along what appeared to have once been a road.
    Oxen and wagon jarred heavily over saplings. After about a mile or less Lucinda saw a light space through the woods. The green failed, and far beyond and above appeared again, only dimmer. There was an opening and a valley--a canyon, Logan had said--just ahead. On the left side of the road a rocky ledge rose. Logan drove through a gap between the ledge and a brushy bank, halted and dismounted to carry poles and small logs with which to improvise a gate closing the opening. How energetic he was and tireless! There seemed a growing passion within him. Lastly he hauled a log that two men might well have found burdensome, which he placed across the gap.
    "Luce girl," he said, intensely, as he mounted beside her. "Our stock is down in the canyon. Fenced in, all save a few holes in the rock rim they'll never find before I close them. Aha!... I'll show you pronto." A great weight seemed lifted from his shoulders.
    Lucinda could not look just yet. She watched Logan jump off the wagon, untie the horses at the back and drive them past the wagon, down what appeared a narrow, overgrown road. She saw him take an axe and chop down a small pine as thick at the base as his thigh. The whole bushy tree, by prodigious effort, he dragged behind the wagon and secured with a chain.
    "What's that for?" she asked him as he returned.
    "Just a drag to hold us back. Pretty steep. Hold on now and look. You'll see the greatest valley in all the West!"
    In spite of herself, Lucinda was compelled to gaze. A long, winding, apparently bottomless gorge yawned beneath them. As the wagon lurched down the grade, this thing Logan called a canyon gradually became visible. It struck Lucinda with appalling force: a grey, granite-walled abyss widening to the south, yawning up at her as if to swallow her. It appeared narrow just below, but it was not narrow. As all this deceitful West, it was not what it appeared. A ribbon of water and waste of white sand wound through the centre of it, to disappear round a bend; beyond, the canyon widened out into a great basin enclosed by yellow slopes and pine-fringed rims.
    Lucinda had to hold on tightly to keep from being thrown off the seat. As the wagon rolled deeper into the declivity, brush on one side and bluff on the other obscured Lucinda's view. The grade steepened. Screeching brakes and crunching wheels increased their clamour. Despite the oxen holding back and the drag of the pine tree behind, the wagon rolled and bumped too fast for safety. Lucinda held on to her seat, although she wondered bitterly why she clung to it so dearly. Then suddenly the pine tree behind broke or pulled loose; the wagon rolled down upon the oxen, forcing them into a dead run, and swaying dangerously one side to the other. Barely in time for safety it rattled out upon the level open of the canyon floor and came to a jarring stop.

Similar Books

Memo: Marry Me?

Jennie Adams

The Water Thief

Nicholas Lamar Soutter

The Sinner

Amanda Stevens

Dead and Alive

Dean Koontz

Splurge

Summer Goldspring

The Ice Warriors

Brian Hayles

Whispers

Dean Koontz