Senor Johnson rode in mufti. Of his
cowboy days persisted still
the high-heeled boots and spurs, the broad Stetson hat, and the
fringed buckskin gauntlets.
The Colt's forty-five had been the last to go. Finally one
evening Senor Johnson received an express
package. He opened it
before the undemonstrative Parker. It proved to
contain a pocket
"gun"--a nickel-plated, thirty-eight calibre Smith & Wesson
"five-shooter." Senor Johnson examined it a little doubtfully.
In
comparison with the six-shooter it looked like a toy.
"How do you, like her?" he inquired, handing the
weapon to
Parker.
Parker turned it over and over, as a child a
rattle. Then he
returned it to its owner.
"Senor," said he, "if ever you shoot me with that little old gun,
AND I find it out the same day, I'll just raise hell with you!"
"I don't
reckon she'd INJURE a man much," agreed the Senor, "but
perhaps she'd call his attention."
However, the "little old gun" took its place, not in Senor
Johnson's hip pocket, but inside the front waistband of his
trousers, and the old shiny Colt's forty-five, with its worn
leather "Texas style" holster, became a bedroom ornament.
Thus, from a
frontiersman dropped Senor Johnson to the
status of
a property owner. In a general way he had to attend to his
interests before the cattlemen's association; he had to arrange
for the buying and
shipping, and the rest was
leisure. He could
now have gone away somewhere as far as time went. So can a fish
live in trees--as far as time goes. And in the daily riding,
riding, riding over the range he found the opportunity for
abstract thought which the
frontier life had
crowded aside.
CHAPTER TWO
THE SHAPES OF ILLUSION
Every day, as always, Senor Johnson rode
abroad over the land.
His surroundings had before been accepted casually as a more or
less pertinent
setting of action and condition. Now he sensed
some of the
fascination of the Arizona desert.
He noticed many things before unnoticed. As he jingled loosely
along on his cow-horse, he observed how the animal waded fetlock
deep in the
gorgeous orange California poppies, and then he
looked up and about, and saw that the rich colour carpeted the
landscape as far as his eye could reach, so that it seemed as
though he could ride on and on through them to the distant
Chiricahuas. Only, close under the hills, lay, unobtrusive, a
narrow
streak of grey. And in a few hours he had reached the
streak of grey, and
ridden out into it to find himself the centre
of a limitless
alkali plain, so that again it seemed the
valleycould
contain nothing else of importance.
Looking back, Senor Johnson could
discern a tenuous
ribbon of
orange--the poppies. And perhaps ahead a little shadow blotted
the face of the
alkali, which, being reached and entered, spread
like fire until it, too, filled the whole plain, until it, too,
arrogated to itself the right of typifying Soda Springs Valley as
a shimmering
prairie of mesquite. Flowered
upland, dead lowland,
brush, cactus,
volcanic rock, sand, each of these for the time
being occupied the whole space, broad as the sea. In the circlet
of the mountains was room for many infinities.
Among the foothills Senor Johnson, for the first time,
appreciated colour. Hundreds of acres of flowers filled the
velvet creases of the little hills and washed over the smooth,
rounded slopes so
accurately in the placing and manner of tinted
shadows that the mind had difficulty in believing the colour not
to have been shaded in
actually by free sweeps of some gigantic
brush. A dozen shades of pinks and
purples, a dozen of blues,
and then the flame reds, the yellows, and the vivid greens.
Beyond were the mountains in their glory of
volcanic rocks, rich
as the
tapestry of a Florentine palace. And, modifying all the
others, the tinted
atmosphere of the south-west, refracting the
sun through the infinitesimal earth motes thrown up
constantly by
the wind devils of the desert, drew before the scene a delicate
and gauzy veil of lilac, of rose, of saffron, of amethyst, or of
mauve, according to the time of day. Senor Johnson discovered
that looking at the
landscapeupside down accentuated the colour
effects. It amused him
vastly suddenly to bend over his saddle
horn, the top of his head nearly
touching his horse's mane. The
distant mountains at once started out into redder prominence;
their shadows of
purple deepened to the royal colour; the rose
veil thickened.
"She's the prettiest country God ever made!" exclaimed Senor
Johnson with entire conviction.
And no matter where he went, nor into how familiar country he
rode, the shapes of
illusion offered always
variety. One day the
Chiricahuas were a tableland; next day a
series of castellated
peaks; now an anvil; now a saw tooth; and
rarely they threw a
magnificent
suspensionbridge across the heavens to their
neighbours, the ranges on the west. Lakes rippling in the wind
and breaking on the shore, cattle big as elephants or small as
rabbits, distances that did not exist and forests that never
were, beds of lava along the hills swearing to a cloud shadow,
while the sky was polished like a precious stone--these, and many
other beautiful and marvellous but empty shows the great desert
displayed
lavishly, with the
glitter and inconsequence of a
dream. Senor Johnson sat on his horse in the hot sun, his chin
in his band, his elbow on the pommel, watching it all with grave,
unshifting eyes.
Occasionally,
belated, he saw the stars, the wonderful desert
stars, blazing clear and unflickering, like the flames of
candles. Or the moon worked her necromancies, hemming him in by
mountains ten thousand feet high through which there was no pass.
And then as he rode, the mountains shifted like the scenes in a
theatre, and he crossed the little sand dunes out from the dream
country to the adobe corrals of the home ranch.
All these things, and many others, Senor Johnson now saw for the
first time, although he had lived among them for twenty years.
It struck him with the
freshness of a surprise. Also it reacted
chemically on his
mental processes to
generate a new power within
him. The new power, being as yet unapplied, made him
uneasy and
restless and a little irritable.
He tried to show some of his wonders to Parker.
"Jed," said he, one day, "this is a great country."
"You KNOW it," replied the
foreman.
"Those tourists in their nickel-plated Pullmans call this a
desert. Desert, hell! Look at them flowers!"
The
foreman cast an eye on a
glorioussilkenmantle of
purple, a
hundred yards broad.
"Sure," he agreed; "shows what we could do if we only had a
little water."
And again: "Jed," began the Senor, "did you ever notice them
mountains?"
"Sure," agreed Jed.
"Ain't that a pretty colour?"
"You bet," agreed the
foreman; "now you're talking! I always,
said they was mineralised enough to make a good prospect."
This was
unsatisfactory. Senor Johnson grew more
restless. His
critical eye began to take
account of small details. At the
ranch house one evening he, on a sudden, bellowed loudly for
Sang, the Chinese servant.
"Look at these!" he roared, when Sang appeared.
Sang's eyes opened in bewilderment.
"There, and there!" shouted the cattleman. "Look at them old