It was not many days after my arrival in the Foothill country that
I began to hear of Gwen. They all had stories of her. The details
were not many, but the impression was vivid. She lived remote from
that centre of civilization known as Swan Creek in the postal
guide, but locally as Old Latour's, far up among the hills near the
Devil's Lake, and from her father's ranch she never ventured. But
some of the men had had glimpses of her and had come to definite
opinions regarding her.
"What is she like?" I asked Bill one day, trying to pin him down to
something like a descriptive account of her.
"Like! She's a terrer," he said, with slow emphasis, "a holy
terrer."
"But what is she like? What does she look like?" I asked
impatiently.
"Look like?" He considered a moment, looked slowly round as if
searching for a simile, then answered: "I dunno."
"Don't know? What do you mean? Haven't you seen her?"
"Yeh! But she ain't like nothin'."
Bill was quite decided upon this point.
I tried again.
"Well, what sort of hair has she got? She's got hair, I suppose?"
"Hayer! Well, a few!" said Bill, with some choice combinations of
profanity in repudiation of my suggestion. "Yards of it! Red!"
"Git out!" contradicted Hi. "Red! Tain't no more red than mine!"
Bill regarded Hi's hair critically.
"What color do you put onto your old brush?" he asked cautiously.
"'Tain't no difference. 'Tain't red, anyhow."
"Red! Well, not quite exactly," and Bill went off into a low,
long, choking chuckle, ejaculating now and then, "Red! Jee-mi-ny
Ann! Red!"
"No, Hi," he went on, recovering himself with the same abruptness
as he used with his bronco, and looking at his friend with a face
even more than usually solemn, "your hayer ain't red, Hi; don't let
any of your relatives persuade you to that. 'Tain't red!" and he
threatened to go off again, but pulled himself up with dangerous
suddenness. "It may be blue, cerulyum blue or even purple, but
red--!" He paused violently, looking at his friend as if he found
him a new and interesting object of study upon which he could not
trust himself to speak. Nor could he be induced to proceed with
the description he had begun.
But Hi, paying no attention to Bill's oration, took up the subject
with enthusiasm.
"She kin ride--she's a reg'lar buster to ride, ain't she, Bill?"
Bill nodded. "She kin bunch cattle an' cut out an' yank a steer up
to any cowboy on the range."
"Why, how big is she?"
"Big? Why, she's just a kid! 'Tain't the bigness of her, it's the
nerve. She's got the coldest kind of nerve you ever seen. Hain't
she, Bill?" And again Bill nodded.
"'Member the day she dropped that steer, Bill?" went on Hi.
"What was that?" I asked, eager for a yarn.
"Oh, nuthin'," said Bill.
"Nuthin'!" retorted Hi. "Pretty big nuthin'!"
"What was it?" I urged.
"Oh, Bill here did some funny work at old Meredith's round-up, but
he don't speak of it. He's shy, you see," and Hi grinned.
"Well, there ain't no occasion for your proceedin' onto that tact,"
said Bill disgustedly, and Hi loyally refrained, so I have never
yet got the rights of the story. But from what I did hear I
gathered that Bill, at the risk of his life, had pulled The Duke
from under the hoofs of a mad steer, and that little Gwen had, in
the coolest possible manner, "sailed in on her bronco" and, by
putting two bullets into the steer's head, had saved them both from
great danger, perhaps from death, for the rest of the cattle were
crowding near. Of course Bill could never be persuaded to speak of
the incident. A true western man will never hesitate to tell you
what he can do, but of what he has done he does not readily speak.
The only other item that Hi contributed to the sketch of Gwen was
that her temper could blaze if the occasion demanded.
"'Member young Hill, Bill?"
Bill "'membered."
"Didn't she cut into him sudden? Sarved him right, too."
"What did she do?"
"Cut him across the face with her quirt in good style."
"What for?"
"Knockin' about her Indian Joe."
Joe was, as I came to learn, Ponka's son and Gwen's most devoted
slave.
"Oh, she ain't no refrigerator."
"Yes," assented Bill. "She's a leetle swift." Then, as if fearing
he had been apologizing for her, he added, with the air of one
settling the question: "But she's good stock! She suits me!"
The Duke helped me to another side of her character.
"She is a remarkable child," he said, one day. "Wild and shy as a
coyote, but fearless, quite; and with a heart full of passions.
Meredith, the Old Timer, you know, has kept her up there among the
hills. She sees no one but himself and Ponka's Blackfeet
relations, who treat her like a goddess and help to spoil her
utterly. She knows their lingo and their ways--goes off with them
for a week at a time."
"What! With the Blackfeet?"
"Ponka and Joe, of course, go along; but even without them she is
as safe as if surrounded by the Coldstream Guards, but she has
given them up for some time now."
"And at home?" I asked. "Has she any education? Can she read or
write?"
"Not she. She can make her own dresses, moccasins and leggings.
She can cook and wash--that is, when she feels in the mood. And
she knows all about the birds and beasts and flowers and that sort
of thing, but--education! Why, she is hardly civilized!"
"What a shame!" I said. "How old is she?"
"Oh, a mere child; fourteen or fifteen, I imagine; but a woman in
many things."
"And what does her father say to all this? Can he control her?"
"Control!" said The Duke, in utter astonishment. "Why, bless your
soul, nothing in heaven or earth could control her. Wait till you
see her stand with her proud little head thrown back, giving orders
to Joe, and you will never again connect the idea of control with
Gwen. She might be a princess for the pride of her. I've seen
some, too, in my day, but none to touch her for sheer, imperial
pride, little Lucifer that she is."
"And how does her father stand her nonsense?" I asked, for I
confess I was not much taken with the picture The Duke had drawn.
"Her father simply follows behind her and adores, as do all things
that come near her, down, or up, perhaps, to her two dogs--Wolf and
Loo--for either of which she would readily die if need be. Still,"
he added, after a pause, "it is a shame, as you say. She ought to
know something of the refinements of civilization, to which, after
all, she belongs, and from which none of us can hope to escape."
The Duke was silent for a few moments, and then added, with some
hesitation: "Then, too, she is quite a pagan; never saw a prayer-
book, you know."
And so it came about, chiefly through The Duke's influence, I
imagine, that I was engaged by the Old Timer to go up to his ranch
every week and teach his daughter something of the elementaries of
a lady's education.
My introduction was ominous of the many things I was to suffer of
that same young maiden before I had finished my course with her.
The Old Timer had given careful directions as to the trail that
would lead me to the canyon where he was to meet me. Up the Swan
went the trail, winding ever downward into deeper and narrower
coulees and up to higher open sunlit slopes, till suddenly it
settled into a valley which began with great width and narrowed to
a canyon whose rocky sides were dressed out with shrubs and
trailing vines and wet with trickling rivulets from the numerous
springs that oozed and gushed from the black, glistening rocks.
This canyon was an eerie place of which ghostly tales were told
from the old Blackfeet times. And to this day no Blackfoot will
dare to pass through this black-walled, oozy, glistening canyon
after the moon has passed the western lip. But in the warm light
of broad day the canyon was a good enough place; cool and sweet,
and I lingered through, waiting for the Old Timer, who failed to
appear till the shadows began to darken its western black sides.
Out of the mouth of the canyon the trail climbed to a wide stretch
of prairie that swept up over soft hills to the left and down to
the bright gleaming waters of the Devil's Lake on the right. In
the sunlight the lake lay like a gem radiant with many colors, the
far side black in the shadow of the crowding pines, then in the
middle deep, blue and purple, and nearer, many shades of emerald
that ran quite to the white, sandy beach. Right in front stood the
ranch buildings, upon a slight rising ground and surrounded by a
sturdy palisade of upright pointed poles. This was the castle of
the princess. I rode up to the open gate, then turned and stood to
look down upon the marvellous lake shining and shimmering with its
many radiant colors. Suddenly there was an awful roar, my pony
shot round upon his hind legs after his beastly cayuse manner,
deposited me sitting upon the ground and fled down the trail,
pursued by two huge dogs that brushed past me as I fell. I was
aroused from my amazement by a peal of laughter, shrill but full of
music. Turning, I saw my pupil, as I guessed, standing at the head
of a most beautiful pinto (spotted) pony with a heavy cattle quirt
in her hand. I scrambled to my feet and said, somewhat angrily, I
fear:
"What are you laughing at? Why don't you call back your dogs?
They will chase my pony beyond all reach."
She lifted her little head, shook back her masses of brown-red
hair, looked at me as if I were quite beneath contempt and said:
"No, they will kill him."
"Then," said I, for I was very angry, "I will kill them," pulling
at the revolver in my belt.
"Then," she said, and for the first time I noticed her eyes blue-
black, with gray rims, "I will kill you," and she whipped out an
ugly-looking revolver. From her face I had no doubt that she would
not hesitate to do as she had said. I changed my tactics, for I
was anxious about my pony, and said, with my best smile:
"Can't you call them back? Won't they obey you?"
Her face changed in a moment.
"Is it your pony? Do you love him very much?"
"Dearly!" I said, persuading myself of a sudden affection for the
cranky little brute.
She sprang upon her pinto and set off down the trail. The pony
was now coursing up and down the slopes, doubling like a hare,
instinctively avoiding the canyon where he would be cornered. He
was mad with terror at the huge brutes that were silently but with
awful and sure swiftness running him down.
The girl on the pinto whistled shrilly, and called to her dogs:
"Down, Wolf! Back, Loo!" but, running low, with long, stretched
bodies, they heeded not, but sped on, ever gaining upon the pony
that now circled toward the pinto. As they drew near in their
circling, the girl urged her pinto to meet them, loosening her
lariat as she went. As the pony neared the pinto he slackened his
speed; immediately the nearer dog gathered herself in two short
jumps and sprang for the pony's throat. But, even as she sprang,
the lariat whirled round the girl's head and fell swift and sure
about the dog's neck, and next moment she lay choking upon the
prairie. Her mate paused, looked back, and gave up the chase. But
dire vengeance overtook them, for, like one possessed, the girl
fell upon them with her quirt and beat them one after the other
till, in pity for the brutes, I interposed.
"They shall do as I say or I shall kill them! I shall kill them!"
she cried, raging and stamping.
"Better shoot them," I suggested, pulling out my pistol.
Immediately she flung herself upon the one that moaned and whined
at her feet, crying:
"If you dare! If you dare!" Then she burst into passionate
sobbing. "You bad Loo! You bad, dear old Loo! But you were bad--
you know you were bad!" and so she went on with her arms about
Loo's neck till Loo, whining and quivering with love and delight,
threatened to go quite mad, and Wolf, standing majestically near,
broke into short howls of impatience for his turn of caressing.
They made a strange group, those three wild things, equally fierce
and passionate in hate and in love.
Suddenly the girl remembered me, and standing up she said, half
ashamed:
"They always obey me. They are mine, but they kill any strange
thing that comes in through the gate. They are allowed to."
"It is a pleasant whim."
"What?"
"I mean, isn't that dangerous to strangers?"
"Oh, no one ever comes alone, except The Duke. And they keep off
the wolves."
"The Duke comes, does he?"
"Yes!" and her eyes lit up. "He is my friend. He calls me his
'princess,' and he teaches me to talk and tells me stories--oh,
wonderful stories!"
I looked in wonder at her face, so gentle, so girlish, and tried to
think back to the picture of the girl who a few moments before had
so coolly threatened to shoot me and had so furiously beaten her
dogs.
I kept her talking of The Duke as we walked back to the gate,
watching her face the while. It was not beautiful; it was too
thin, and the mouth was too large. But the teeth were good, and
the eyes, blue-black with gray rims, looked straight at you; true
eyes and brave, whether in love or in war. Her hair was her glory.
Red it was, in spite of Hi's denial, but of such marvellous,
indescribable shade that in certain lights, as she rode over the
prairie, it streamed behind her like a purple banner. A most
confusing and bewildering color, but quite in keeping with the
nature of the owner.
She gave her pinto to Joe and, standing at the door, welcomed me
with a dignity and graciousness that made me think that The Duke
was not far wrong when he named her "Princess."
The door opened upon the main or living room. It was a long,
apartment, with low ceiling and walls of hewn logs chinked and
plastered and all beautifully whitewashed and clean. The tables,
chairs and benches were all home-made. On the floor were
magnificent skins of wolf, bear, musk ox and mountain goat. The
walls were decorated with heads and horns of deer and mountain
sheep, eagles' wings and a beautiful breast of a loon, which Gwen
had shot and of which she was very proud. At one end of the room a
huge stone fireplace stood radiant in its summer decorations of
ferns and grasses and wild-flowers. At the other end a door opened
into another room, smaller and richly furnished with relics of
former grandeur.
Everything was clean and well kept. Every nook, shelf and corner
was decked with flowers and ferns from the canyon.
A strange house it was, full of curious contrasts, but it fitted
this quaint child that welcomed me with such gracious courtesy.