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Gunsight Pass: How Oil Came to the Cattle Country and Brought a New West

Page 35

by William MacLeod Raine


  CHAPTER XXXV

  FIRE IN THE CHAPARRAL

  A carpenter working on the roof of a derrick for Jackpot Number Sixcalled down to his mates:

  "Fire in the hills, looks like. I see smoke."

  The contractor was an old-timer. He knew the danger of fire in thechaparral at this season of the year.

  "Run over to Number Four and tell Crawford," he said to his small son.

  Crawford and Hart had just driven out from town.

  "I'll shag up the tower and have a look," the younger man said.

  He had with him no field-glasses, but his eyes were trained tolong-distance work. Years in the saddle on the range had made him anexpert at reading such news as the landscape had written on it.

  "Fire in Bear Canon!" he shouted down. "Quite a bit of smoke risin'."

  "I'll ride right up and look it over," the cattleman called back. "Betterget a gang together to fight it, Bob. Hike up soon as you're ready."

  Crawford borrowed without permission of the owner the nearest saddlehorse and put it to a lope. Five minutes might make all the differencebetween a winning and a losing fight.

  From the tower Hart descended swiftly. He gathered together all thecarpenters, drillers, enginemen, and tool dressers in the vicinity andequipped them with shovels, picks, brush-hooks, saws, and axes. To eachone he gave also a gunnysack.

  The foot party followed Crawford into the chaparral, making for the hillsthat led to Bear Canon. A wind was stirring, and as they topped a rise itstruck hot on their cheeks. A flake of ash fell on Bob's hand.

  Crawford met them at the mouth of the canon.

  "She's rip-r'arin', Bob! Got too big a start to beat out. We'll clear afire-break where the gulch narrows just above here and do our fightin'there."

  The sparks of a thousand rockets, flung high by the wind, were swept downthe gulch toward them. Behind these came a curtain of black smoke.

  The cattleman set his crew to work clearing a wide trail across the gorgefrom wall to wall. The undergrowth was heavy, and the men attacked withbrush-hooks, shovels, and axes. One man, with a wet gunnysack, wasdetailed to see that no flying sparks started a new blaze below thesafety zone. The shovelers and grubbers cleared the grass and roots offto the dirt for a belt of twenty feet. They banked the loose dirt at thelower edge to catch flying firebrands. Meanwhile the breath of thefurnace grew to a steady heat on their faces. Flame spurts had leapedforward to a grove of small alders and almost in a minute the brancheswere crackling like fireworks.

  "I'll scout round over the hill and have a look above," Bob said. "We'vegot to keep it from spreading out of the gulch."

  "Take the horse," Crawford called to him.

  One good thing was that the fire was coming down the canon. A downhillblaze moves less rapidly than one running up.

  Runners of flame, crawling like snakes among the brush, struck out at thefighters venomously and tried to leap the trench. The defenders flailedat these with the wet gunnysacks.

  The wind was stiffer now and the fury of the fire closer. The flamesroared down the canon like a blast furnace. Driven back by the intenseheat, the men retreated across the break and clung to their line. Alreadytheir lungs were sore from inhaling smoke and their throats wereinflamed. A pine, its pitchy trunk ablaze, crashed down across thefire-trail and caught in the fork of a tree beyond. Instantly the foliageleaped to red flame.

  Crawford, axe in hand, began to chop the trunk and a big Swede swung anaxe powerfully on the opposite side. The rest of the crew continued tobeat down the fires that started below the break. The chips flew at eachrhythmic stroke of the keen blades. Presently the tree crashed down intothe trail that had been hewn. It served as a conductor, and along ittongues of fire leaped into the brush beyond. Glowing branches, flung bythe wind and hurled from falling timber, buried themselves in the dryundergrowth. Before one blaze was crushed half a dozen others started inits place. Flails and gunnysacks beat these down and smothered them.

  Bob galloped into the canon and flung himself from the horse as he pulledit up in its stride.

  "She's jumpin' outa the gulch above. Too late to head her off. We betterget scrapers up and run a trail along the top o' the ridge, don't youreckon?" he said.

  "Yes, son," agreed Crawford. "We can just about hold her here. It'll behours before I can spare a man for the ridge. We got to get help in ahurry. You ride to town and rustle men. Bring out plenty of dynamiteand gunnysacks. Lucky we got the tools out here we brought to build thesump holes."

  "Betcha! We'll need a lot o' grub, too."

  The cattleman nodded agreement. "And coffee. Cayn't have too much coffee.It's food and drink and helps keep the men awake."

  "I'll remember."

  "And for the love o' Heaven, don't forget canteens! Get every canteen intown. Cayn't have my men runnin' around with their tongues hangin' out.Better bring out a bunch of broncs to pack supplies around. It's goin' tobe one man-sized contract runnin' the commissary."

  The canon above them was by this time a sea of fire, the most terrifyingsight Bob had ever looked upon. Monster flames leaped at the walls of thegulch, swept in an eyebeat over draws, attacked with a savage roar thedry vegetation. The noise was like the crash of mountains meeting.Thunder could scarce have made itself heard.

  Rocks, loosened by the heat, tore down the steep incline of the walls,sometimes singly, sometimes in slides. These hit the bed of the ravinewith the force of a cannon-ball. The workers had to keep a sharp lookoutfor these.

  A man near Bob was standing with his weight on the shovel he had beenusing. Hart gave a shout of warning. At the same moment a large rockstruck the handle and snapped it off as though it had been kindling wood.The man wrung his hands and almost wept with the pain.

  A cottontail ran squealing past them, driven from its home by this newand deadly enemy. Not far away a rattlesnake slid across the hot rocks.Their common fear of man was lost in a greater and more immediate one.

  Hart did not like to leave the battle-field. "Lemme stay here. You canhandle that end of the job better'n me, Mr. Crawford."

  The old cattleman, his face streaked with black, looked at him frombloodshot eyes. "Where do you get that notion I'll quit a job I'vestarted, son? You hit the trail. The sooner the quicker."

  The young man wasted no more words. He swung to the saddle and rode fortown faster than he had ever traveled in all his hard-riding days.

 

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