第67章

A WOLFVILLE THANKSGIVING.

It was in the earlier days of autumn.Summer had gone, and there was already a crisp sentiment of coming cold in the air.The Old Cattleman and I had given way to a taste for pedestrianism that had lain dormant through the hot months.It was at the close of our walk, and we were slowly making our way homeward.

"An' now the year's got into what hoss-folks calls the last quarter," remarked the old gentleman musingly."You can feel the frost in the atmosphere; you can see where it's bit the leaves a lot, an' some of 'em's pale with the pain, an' others is blood-red from the wound."Which I don't regard winter much, say twenty years ago.Thar's many a night when I spreads my blankets in the Colorado hills, flakes of snow a-fallin' as soft an' big an' white as a woman's hand, an' never heeds 'em a little bit.But them days is gone.Thar's no roof needed in my destinies then.An' as for bed, a slicker an' a pair of hobbles is sumptuous.

"When a gent rounds up seventy years he's mighty likely to get a heap interested in weather.It's the heel of the hunt with him then, an' he's worn an' tired, and turns nacherally to rest an' fire."We plodded forward as he talked.To his sage comments on the seasons, and as well the old age of men, I offered nothing.My silence, however, seemed always to meet with his tacit approval; nor did he allow it to impede his conversational flow.

"Well," observed the old fellow, after a pause, "I reckons I'll see the winter through all right; likewise the fall.I'm a mighty sight like that old longhorn who allows he's allers noticed if he lives through the month of March he lives through the rest of the year; so I figgers I'll hold together that a-way ontil shorely March comin'.

Anyhow I regards it as an even break I does.

"Thar's one thing about fall an' winter which removes the dreariness some.I alloods to them festivals sech as Thanksgivin' an' Christmas an' New Year.Do we-alls cel'brate these yere events in Wolfville?

Which we shorely does.Take Christmas: You-all couldn't find a sober gent in Wolfville on that holy occasion with a search-warrant; the feelin' to cel'brate is that wide-spread an' fervid.

"Thanksgivin' ain't so much lotted on; which for one thing we frequent forgets it arrives that a-way.Thar's once, though, when we takes note of its approach, an' nacherally, bein' organized, we ketches it squar' in the door.Them Thanksgivin' doin's is shorely great festivities that time.It's certainly a whirl.

"Old Man Enright makes the first break; he sorter arranges the game.

But before all is over, the food we eats, the whiskey we drinks, an'

the lies we tells an' listens to, is a shock an' a shame to Arizona.

"Thar's a passel of us prowlin' 'round in the Red Light one day, when along comes Enright.He's got a paper in his hand, an' from the air he assooms it's shore plain he's on the brink of somethin'.

"'What I'm thinkin' of, gents, is this,' says Enright, final.'Iobserves to-morrow to be Thanksgivin' by this yere paper Old Monte packs in from Tucson.The Great Father sets to-morrow for a national blow-out, a-puttin' of it in his message on the broad ground that everybody's lucky who escapes death.Now, the question is, be we in this? an' if so, what form the saturnalia takes?'

What's the matter of us hoppin' over an' shootin' up Red Dog?" says Dan Boggs.'That bunch of tarrapins ain't been shook up none for three months.'

"'Technical speakin',' says Doc Peets--which Peets, he shorely is the longest-headed sharp I ever sees, an' the galiest--'shootin' up Red Dog, while it's all right as a prop'sition an' highly creditable to Boggs, is not a Thanksgivin' play.The game, turned strict, confines itse'f to eatin', drinkin', an' lyin'.'

"'Thar's plenty of whiskey in camp,' says Jack Moore, meditative-like, 'whereby that drinkin' part comes easy.'

"'I assooms it's the will of all to pull off a proper Thanksgivin'

caper,' says Enright, 'an' tharfore I su'gests that Doc Peets and Boggs waits on Missis Rucker at the O.K.restauraw an' learns what for a banquet she can rustle an' go the limit.Pendin' the return of Peets an' Boggs I allows the balance of this devoted band better imbibe some.Barkeep, sort out some bottles.'

"The committee comes back after a little, an' allows Missis Rucker reports herse'f shy on viands on account of the freighters bein'

back'ard comin' in.

"'But,' says Peets, 'she's upholstered to make a strong play on salt hoss an' baked beans, with coffee an' biscuits for games on the side.'

"'That's good enough for a dog,' says Jack Moore, 'to say nothin' of mere people.Any gent who thinks he wants more is the effect victim of whims.'

"While we-alls is discussin' the ground plans for this yere feast, thar's a clatter of pony-hoofs an' a wild yell outside, an' next thar's a big, shaggy-lookin' vagrant, a-settin' on his hoss in front of the Red Light's door.

"'Get an axe, somebody,' he shouts, 'an' widen this yere portal some.I aims to come in on my hoss.'

"`Hands up, thar!' says Jack Moore, reachin' for his six-shooter.

'Hands up! I'll jest fool you up about comin' in on your hoss.You work in one wink too many now, an' I puts a hole in your face right over the eye.'

"'Go slow, Jack,' says Enright.'Who may you-all be?' he goes on to the locoed man on the hoss.

"'Me?' says the locoed man.'I'm Red Dog Bill.Tell that sot,' he continues, p'intin' at Jack, ' to put down his gun an' not offer it at me no more.He's a heap too vivid with that weepon.Only I'm a white-winged harbinger of peace, I shore ups an' makes him eat the muzzle offen it.'

"'Well, whatever be you thirstin' for, anyhow?' says Enright.'You comes ridin' in yere like you ain't got no regards for nothin'.Is this a friendly call, or be you present on a theery that you runs the town?'

"'I'm the Red Dog committee on invitations,' he says.'Red Dog sends its comps, an' asks Wolfville to bury the hatchet for one day in honor of to-morrow bein' Thanksgivin', an' come feed with us.'

"'Let's go him,' says Dan Boggs.