Outcasts of Picture Rocks

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by Cherry Wilson




  OUTCASTS OF

  PICTURE ROCKS

  CHERRY WILSON

  “Outcasts of Picture Rocks” © 1932 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.

  © renewed 1960 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.

  © 1999 by Golden West Literary Agency

  E-book published in 2018 by Blackstone Publishing

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Trade e-book ISBN 978-1-4708-6170-4

  Library e-book ISBN 978-1-4708-6169-8

  Fiction / Westerns

  CIP data for this book is available from the Library of Congress

  Blackstone Publishing

  31 Mistletoe Rd.

  Ashland, OR 97520

  www.BlackstonePublishing.com

  FOREWORD

  Today, only the aficionado of Western fiction is familiar with the Western stories of Cherry Wilson. Yet, over the span of her writing career—approximately from 1924 to 1943—her stories regularly appeared in Western Story Magazine, the highest paying of the Street & Smith publications, where her work was held to be equal in stature to the works of Max Brand by both editors and readers. She produced over two hundred short stories, short novels, and serials—five of the latter of which were brought out as hardcover books—and six motion pictures were based on her fiction. Despite her popularity, little is known about her, including her maiden name. What is known is that, when she was sixteen, her family moved to the Pacific Northwest from Pennsylvania. She married Bob Wilson, and the two led a nomadic life, during which Cherry gained some experience writing for newspapers. In 1924, when Bob fell ill, the couple stopped traveling, took up a homestead, and to earn money Wilson decided to write Western fiction. When her first story was accepted by Western Story Magazine, it began what would prove a long-standing professional relationship with Street & Smith magazine editors.

  Thematically Wilson’s fiction was similar to B. M. Bower’s, but stylistically her stories are less episodic and, with growing experience, exhibit a greater maturity of sensibility. Her early work, especially, parallels Bower rather closely in that she developed a series of interconnected tales about the cowhands of the Triangle Z Ranch. There is also a similar emphasis on male bonding and comedic scenes—“All-in” in Western Story Magazine (11/8/24) explains how the cowpunchers acquire instruments to form the Triangle Z all-brass band and “Triangle Z’s All-Brass Serenade” in Western Story Magazine (12/13/26) has this band serenading a Spanish señorita with an imperfect rendition of “Old Black Joe!” She varied the series by borrowing an idea from Peter B. Kyne’s The Three Godfathers (1913), making her cowpunchers cooperative caretakers of an orphan in seven of the stories, beginning with “Hushaby’s Partner” in Western Story Magazine (5/29/26). Perhaps the most unusual and interesting of the Triangle Z stories is “Shootin’-up Sheriff” in the June 15, 1929 issue of Western Story Magazine, in which a town is taken over by women who occupy all the public offices and outlaw gambling, smoking, swearing, and for entertainment show educational films.

  Wilson stressed human relationships in preference to gun play and action which generally occurs en camera. In fact, some of her best work can be found in those stories where the focus is on relationships between children and men, as in her novel, Stormy (Chelsea House, 1929), and short stories like “Ghost Town Trail” in Western Story Magazine (10/25/30)—a fascinating tale with an eerie setting and a storyline filled with mystery which can be found in The Morrow Anthology of Great Western Short Stories (Morrow, 1997), edited by Jon Tuska and Vicki Piekarski—and “The Swing Man’s Trail” in Western Story Magazine (12/13/30), in which a boy doggedly pursues a herd of rustled cattle that has swept up his family’s only cow. She wrote poignantly about man’s relationships with animals, and like Max Brand had an especial fondness for horses. Black Wing in the following story is a good example of this love.

  Outcasts of Picture Rocks tells the story of two generations of the Jore family, feared and ostracized by all others, and both protected and imprisoned by their Arizona mountain stronghold. “Lovin’ folks is strings on a man,” Zion Jore says at one point, and it is the bonds of family and friendship that make this story such an emotionally powerful journey for the reader.

  Vicki Piekarski

  Portland, Oregon

  CHAPTER ONE

  THEY SAY

  From the rambling adobe hostelry, Trail’s End, in Big Sandy, Arizona, one looks across vast sweeps of tawny rangelands to the jagged summits of the Montezuma Mountains. And immediately, the eye is drawn to a great, flat-topped dome, veiled in mists of palest violet, that towers a full thousand feet above the highest peak. It resembles nothing so much as a gigantic, exquisitely tinted cup, with fluted rim and one thin, time-seasoned crack splitting it from rim to base.

  Wonderingly, seeing it for the first time and enjoying the sunset from the wide, shaded gallery, the latest guest asks just what that cup contains. The answer comes from old Dad Peppin, the genial, picturesque host of Trail’s End who had lived long in the land: “Sure death for the curious!”

  But this seeming a reproof, when, heaven knew, no one was more curious in this respect than himself, quickly the old man explained: “Why, that’s the Picture Rocks Basin.”

  Picture Rocks? Every section of Arizona had its quota of them—the sign writing of a prehistoric people, which modernity could not decipher, a perpetual challenge to students of antiquity, and an unfailing source of interest to everyone. But—death to be curious about them? Some foolish legend!

  “It’s a crater, of course,” mused the stranger, unimpressed. “The core of an old volcano. Burned out ages ago.”

  His host solemnly agreed. “It’s a volcano, all right, but it ain’t burnt out by a blamed sight. Every now and then, it flares up and overflows.” Meeting a smile of disbelief, he said, in simple explanation: “The Jores live there.”

  He felt a certain pride at the way the stranger whipped around in his chair. “Not the Jores! Not the outlaws who’ve kept this state in hot water for thirty years?”

  “The same,” replied old Dad Peppin, nodding his head. “That basin’s been their refuge for two generations. What’s in there, you’re free to guess. But the Jores taboo all trespass and enforce it with fast rifles. You see that split, runnin’ down from them two highest spires? Waal, that’s Sentry Crags, the one known pass. Day and night, they guard it. Right this minute there’s a sentinel on watch. They can see a rider comin’ for miles. And if one gits too close … waal, the Jores don’t miss.”

  Eagerly succumbing to the lure of the forbidden, the visitor said: “I’d like to see the Picture Rocks Basin.”

  “Nothin’ original about that.” Dad’s sun wrinkles deepened. “Half the men in Arizony has the same itch. Especially Pat Dolan, our esteemed sheriff. But he’s wise enough to take it out in wishin’.”

  “You don’t seriously mean to say,” protested the guest, “they’d shoot a man for goin’ in?”

  Mighty serious, Dad Peppin said: “They’d no more hesitate than you’d think twice about shootin’ a man who was breakin’ into your home with murder in his heart. They wouldn’t dare hesitate! It’s them against the world. They’d shoot … and I don’t blame them. A man’s home is his castle. And the Picture Rocks has been home to the Jores ever since ol’ Jerico took refuge in that basin and defied a whole troop of US cavalry to take him.”

  “Jerico Jore? I’ve heard of him. A leader in the old Los Lobos range war. A renegade of the worst kind!”

&n
bsp; Queer, the smile that played upon Dad Peppin’s lips. “Mebbe,” he admitted slowly. “Mebbe he was. Reckon all us ole-timers was renegades, lookin’ back at us. We’re sure misfits now … caught betwixt two civilizations. But Jerico, he was a product of his time. And he sure did fit in then. Just the kind of man you wanted around when Apaches was on the warpath, or where there was other fightin’ to be done. Life hung by the flame of a six-gun. It was as sweet then … sweeter, for you wa’n’t sure of a tomorrow. No law but the six-gun. And a man what’s had to make his own law and enforce it is kinda apt to forgit.

  “But Jerico,” the old man broke in firmly on his own rambling, “wa’n’t cold-blooded. But warm, and loyal to the core. I never knowed a honester man. Oh, mebbe he had careless ideas about other men’s cows, and corralled cash … like banks and payrolls … but he was as far above any low-down picayune thievin’ as you or me. And when the law come to Los Lobos, the government offered him a pardon, if he’d put up his gun. But he’d made enemies what wouldn’t let him. It was kill ’em, or be killed. He got some. And the state went out for his scalp. He holed up in the Picture Rocks, and, havin’ a family to support, he often made forays where the biggest surplus was.”

  Affected by this way of putting it, “What happened to him?” asked the guest.

  “Leaded,” was the terse answer. “A posse rounded him up over on the Verde, and buried him there years ago. It’s his boys that’s holdin’ the Picture Rocks.”

  “Then it was his sons who made a foray on the surplus of the Whitestone Bank last …?”

  “And committed every crime from arson to mayhem in this state, to hear tell of it,” interrupted Dad Peppin with considerable heat. “Give a dog a bad name. Oh, I ain’t upholdin’ ’em. Nor I ain’t blamin’ ’em. They was raised in that basin … was outlaws before they knowed what it was all about. They’re dangerous and desperate. But they got to live. If you cage a wolf and don’t feed it, you got no kick comin’ if it busts out and helps itself.”

  Suppressing a smile at this novel defense, realizing it was the viewpoint of most Big Sandy old-timers, so at variance with the rest of Arizona, the stranger mused: “I judge from the howl that goes up, there’s quite a pack of these wolves. How many sons did Jerico have?”

  “Just three … Yance, Abel, and Joel. Joel ain’t apt to cause any more trouble. He’s servin’ a life sentence in state prison. But Yance and Abel’s up there. And Shang Haman … a devil, if ever there was one! Nobody knows how Shang got in with them. He’s no kin, though it’s rumored he’s got ambitions in that direction. They say he’s plumb loco about Joel’s daughter, Eden.”

  His interest flaming, the man cried out: “A girl in that basin?”

  “Aye,” old Dad affirmed gently. “As Big Sandy folks can swear. We all seen her, when she come down to attend her father’s trial. And no man who seen her will ever forget her. She stayed in this house. Stood by her father till they sent him up for life. Her mother didn’t appear, nor the boy, Zion. A feather in Pat Dolan’s cap, that was. His taste has run to feathers since. Swears he won’t rest till Yance and Abel is keepin’ company with Joel.”

  “But the girl?” demanded the stranger, his eyes on the ragged rims up there. “Did she go back?”

  “Yes, poor lass. Right after the verdict. Wanted to. Why, nights after the trial was done, she’d set out here, right in that chair where you’re a-settin’, and look up at them ol’ rims, longin’ like a bird that’s left its cage and hones to get back.”

  The stranger was silent then, his heart gripped by something in the picture drawn.

  “She was just a slip of a girl then, sixteen,” the old man rambled on. “That would make her … le’s see, around eighteen now. And if she lives up to the promise she give then, she’ll be a woman worth riskin’ a heap to see. She’s got Jore eyes … blue … waal, the purple blue that’s on the rims now. But she takes after her mother other ways. And Revel Jore, they say, was the flower of the whole Southwest in her day. Come of a fine ol’ family, and could have had her pick of men. But one luckless day, she met the dashin’ outlaw, Joel Jore, and give up everything to go with him.”

  The old man sighed. “They say,” he continued in lowered tone, “the strain of sharin’ a fugitive’s life unsettled her reason. They say she rules the clan, since Joel went to prison, by some strange gift of prophecy.

  “They say,” he went on, and, taut with interest, the stranger bent to him, “the mother’s unfortunate destiny has left its stamp on her young son, Zion. That he’s wild as any mustang, kin to all wild things, and rides the basin like an avengin’ demon. They say the spirit of ol’ Jerico was born again in him.” He broke off, seeming to feel that he had said too much. And, to extenuate it he added, as he smiled plaintively: “They say a lot about the Picture Rocks. You can’t tell where fact leaves off and fancy begins. Just seein’ that ol’ crater, knowin’ what it holds, whets the imagination. Sets you to wonderin’ what’s goin’ to happen to them it holds. And you get to believin’ what you dreamed was fact and pass it on as such. And of all the wild tales told, the wildest by far hinges around Zion Jore.”

  Tensely, the stranger said: “But you believe them?”

  The answer was long in coming. Then: “I … I’m afeered to,” faltered old Dad Peppin. And his face, as scarred and still and brown as the adobe wall behind him, was shadowed with more than the day’s dying. “The spirit of ol’ Jerico, without his sense of responsibility …” A chill ran through the old man. “Friend,” he cried somberly, “you’ll hear of Zion Jore!”

  The stranger would.

  Hushed, as though he had already heard, he sat looking at the great cup against the darkening sky, thinking of the misery it concealed, wondering what would happen to those it held. The sun was down long since, faded, its flush. Weird shadows played among the crags. A cloud hung over it—sullen, black, as if it were the slow-gathering smoke of the impending upheaval that would shake the state.

  “But about the golden horse,” startlingly Dad Peppin spoke, “I don’t believe that.”

  “What?”

  “A horse whose yellow skin is marked with just a jet-black wing! A thoroughbred stallion that kings it over the mustangs in that basin. Worth a king’s ransom, they say. But let to run, unbranded, untamed, and unclaimed. That’s the story that goes the rounds. But it’s too much for me to swallow.”

  Too much for Dad Peppin to down, credulous as he was to all pertaining to the Jores; too much for the stranger to down, for he laughed. And yet one man outside that basin knew, from his personal and incredible experience, that it was true. This man had actually defied the Jores’ guns and set foot in the forbidden land, and he could have told Dad Peppin that the beauty of Eden lived up to the promise given; that the occult powers of Revel Jore were no legend; and—what he feared to know—that the irresponsible Zion had all the spirit of old Jerico!

  This man had also seen the glorious wild horse of the Picture Rocks. His knowledge of it ran four years back—back to the night when Sahra, favorite racer of the nationally known horse breeder, Luke Chartres, had escaped her pasture at his Val Verde ranch, over the Navajo country, and with her young foal, Black Wing, been swept into a wild horse stampede, and was never seen again. This stampede, by the way, gave every sign of having been engineered by human brains.

  For this man, Race Coulter—an ex-jockey, “gone heavy,” but who followed the ponies as racetrack gambler and tout—had been entrusted with delivery of a newly purchased horse to the Val Verde stables and was a guest at the ranch the very night Sahra had disappeared. He had ridden with Chartres and his cowboys in hot pursuit of the mare and foal. The chase brought them—after days of hard riding—into the wilds of the Montezuma Mountains to the very foot of the great dome, where, just as the scent was hottest, Chartres suddenly, inexplicably, definitely called the chase off, ordering his cowboys home and following them, with no word o
f explanation. Nor had he ever made, so far as Race could hear, any subsequent attempt to reclaim the mare.

  Why hadn’t he? How could he possibly abandon to the wild the great Sahra, and her son, Black Wing, in whose veins ran the blood of the mighty Crusader? That question tormented Race Coulter, gave him no rest, until he resolved to find out for himself, and, if possible, for he hadn’t a scruple on earth, salvage that fortune in horseflesh.

  Bent on this, he had returned to Arizona in the spring and, hiring riders for a wild horse hunt, had led them straight to the pass at Sentry Crags and into the guns of the Jores—only to be turned back with a warning grim enough to curb his greed for four long years. He believed, then, it was fear of the outlaws that had turned Luke Chartres back.

  Last autumn he had summoned courage to try again. Alone this time, he had actually penetrated the basin, unseen by any Jore, he thought, but, as he soon found out, watched all the time by the youngest, fiercest, least responsible of the clan, the wild youth, Zion. Spared by him until he had seen Sahra’s son, magnificently grown, and every drop of horse-mad blood in his veins had fused into a frenzy of desire that but increased his dying torture, for he would have died then but for Revel Jore, that ill-fated, tragic mistress of the outlaw basin, who intervened in the nick of time and saved him. But it was the terror of her prophecy, rather than the Jores’ guns, that restrained Race Coulter from a third attempt.

  Never, however, did he give up his determination to possess the stallion. Desire, kindled by that single glimpse, was a fever within him, which time did not lessen, nor distance—nothing! At Tijuana, Tampa, Long Island, or Vancouver, wherever “quick-bloods” ran and men bet on them, his brain was forever casting about for some scheme, whereby he might wrest the princely Black Wing from the Jores, and so get him out of the Picture Rocks.

  He was so casting this May Day, on the Lakeshore course in Cleveland, when he met René Rand, known to the tracks as the Reno Kid, and, strangely, the way came to him.

 

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