FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   >>  
et about the task of hunting him down with an intensity of purpose which, like the river that is dammed, grew more fierce from being balked. All manner of traps had failed for him. Steel traps he could smash, no log trap was strong enough to hold this furry elephant; he would not come to a bait; he never fed twice from the same kill. Two reckless boys once trailed him to a rocky glen. The horses would not enter; the boys went in afoot, and were never seen again. The Mexicans held him in superstitious terror, believing that he could not be killed; and he passed another year in the cattle-land, known and feared now as the "Monarch of the Range," killing in the open by night, and retiring by day to his fastness in the near hills, where horsemen could not follow. Bonamy had been called away; but all that summer, and winter, too,--for the Grizzly no longer "denned up,"--Kellyan rode and rode, each time too late or too soon to meet the Monarch. He was almost giving up, not in despair, but for lack of means, when a message came from a rich man, a city journalist, offering to multiply the reward by ten if, instead of killing the Monarch, he would bring him in alive. Kellyan sent for his old partner, and when word came that the previous night three cows were killed in the familiar way near the Bell-Dash pasture, they spared neither horse nor man to reach the spot. A ten-hour ride by night meant worn-out horses, but the men were iron, and new horses with scarcely a minute's delay were brought them. Here were the newly killed beeves, there the mighty footprints with the scars that spelled his name. No hound could have tracked him better than Kellyan did. Five miles away from the foot of the hills was an impenetrable thicket of chaparral. The great tracks went in, did not come out, so Bonamy sat sentinel while Kellyan rode back with the news. "Saddle up the best we got!" was the order. Rifles were taken down and cartridge-belts being swung when Kellyan called a halt. "Say, boys, we've got him safe enough. He won't try to leave the chaparral till night. If we shoot him we get the cattlemen's bounty; if we take him alive--an' it's easy in the open--we get the newspaper bounty, ten times as big. Let's leave all guns behind; lariats are enough." "Why not have the guns along to be handy?" "'Cause I know the crowd too well; they couldn't resist the chance to let him have it; so no guns at all. It's ten to one on the riata.
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   >>  



Top keywords:

Kellyan

 
horses
 
Monarch
 

killed

 

killing

 

called

 

Bonamy

 

chaparral

 
bounty
 

spelled


tracked
 
scarcely
 

minute

 

beeves

 

mighty

 

brought

 

footprints

 
tracks
 

newspaper

 

lariats


cattlemen

 
cartridge
 
couldn
 

chance

 

resist

 

impenetrable

 
thicket
 

sentinel

 

Rifles

 

Saddle


reckless

 

trailed

 

elephant

 

terror

 

superstitious

 

believing

 

passed

 

Mexicans

 
dammed
 

purpose


intensity

 

hunting

 

strong

 
failed
 
fierce
 
balked
 

manner

 

cattle

 

offering

 

journalist