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Authors: Edward Abbey

The Brave Cowboy

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The Brave Cowboy
An Old Tale in a New Time

Edward Abbey

Copyright

The Brave Cowboy
Copyright © 1956 by Edward Abbey, renewed 1984 by Edward Abbey
Cover art to the electronic edition copyright © 2011 by RosettaBooks, LLC

The characters, places, incidents and situations in this book are imaginary and have no relation to any person, place or actual happening.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Electronic edition published 2011 by RosettaBooks LLC, New York.
ISBN e-Pub edition: 9780795317514

To the outlaws—
to all of them:
the good and the bad, the ugly
and the pretty, the dead and the live

It’s only a story. None of it really happened. How could it? How could such people be? The prisoner is probably a professor. The sheriff loses the next election. The truckdriver died of emphysema. And as for the cowboy, that character, why nobody even knows where he is anymore. Or even, to be honest, if he ever really was.

Ballad of the Brave Cowboy

Come sit here beside me
and I will relate
the tale of a cowboy
and his terrible fate.

His name it was Burns
and he came from the East;
no more would he say
to man nor beast.

He worked for his wages
on a Magdalene spread:
a dollar a day,
beef, beans and bread.

A tough, dirty life
and death in a ditch;
hard on the kidneys,
bad for the itch;
a man might get suntanned,
he wouldn’t get rich.

Like all brave cowboys dead and alive
on riding and wind and stars he could thrive
with a home-made song to keep his heart alive.

Burns was skinny and dark
and he kept most alone;
he had only one friend,
a kid named Bone.

Together they rode
and together they fought
when they got to town
and drank a lot
and bluffed each other
shot after shot

Like all good cowboys dead and alive
on fighting and grit and blood they thrive
with a little strong whisky to keep hope alive.

One day in the fall
came orders for battle:
twenty-five men against
five thousand cattle.

The sky was yellow
and the sun was red
when the drive started south
for the town of Mordred.

We knew by the signs
we were in for some fun:
the wind screamed high
the dust-devils spun
and five thousand longhorns
started to run.

Like all dumb cowhands alive and dead
on trouble and sand and cactus they fed
and on payday a little brown girl in bed.

It was thunder and hell
when the herd broke loose;
a man was safer
with his head in a noose.

We got them turned
but too strung out,
they kept on running
and came right about.

Young Bone rode the drag
and got lost in the dust,
rode his horse in a hole
and a leg got bust.

He scrambled around
and looked for the fray;
saw 10,000 red eyes
coming his way,
saw 20,000 hooves
coming for pay.

He tried to run
he tried to crawl;
nothing he did
was no help at all.

He liked to have prayed
but could not recollect
the words that his Mother
had tried to inject
and it looked for sure
his career was wrecked.

O all brave cowboys dead and revived
God only knows how you ever survived
or stayed out of Hell with souls unshrived.

Now Burns rode the point
and saw his friend’s danger,
came galloping up
like a Texas Ranger.

He hauled the kid up
while his horse danced around
and the herd roared close
on the rumbling ground.

They tried to get clear
but it was too late,
they were surrounded
by bellowing hate
and the panicked horse
completed their fate.

The scream of that horse
was an awful sound
when the crazy herd
rode them all down
and kicked and rolled them
over the ground.

Like many poor cowhands alive and dead
they never had a chance to die in bed
or even get their prayers said.

When the herd was stopped
and the dust blew away
we found their bodies
mixed with the clay.

The kid had a home
in Texas named Blair
where we shipped what was left
of his hide and hair,
but the cowboy Burns
we buried right there.

Like all brave cowboys dead and alive
on riding and wind and stars he thrived
with a home-made song to keep his heart alive
with a song to keep alive.

A Prologue

T
HERE IS A VALLEY
IN
THE
W
EST
WHERE
PHANTOMS
come to brood and mourn, pale phantoms dying of nostalgia and bitterness. You can hear them shivering, chattering, among the leaves of the old dry mortal cottonwoods down by the river—whispering and moaning and hissing with the wind over the black cones of the five volcanoes on the west—you can hear them under the red cliffs of the Sangre Mountains on the other side of the valley, whining their past away with the wild dove and the mockingbird—and you may see one, touch one, in the silences and space and mute terror of the desert, if you ride away from the river, which in this barren land is the river of life.

The Rio Bravo comes down from the mountains of Colorado and the mountains of Santa Fe and flows into the valley, passing between the dead volcanoes on the west and the wall of mountains on the east. The river flows past the cornfields and mud villages of the Indians, past thickets of red willow and cane and scrub oak, through the fringe of the white man’s city and under the four-lane bridge of his national highway, beyond the city and the bridge and past more mud villages, more cornfields; the river flows beyond Thieves’ Mountain far to the south and vanishes at last into the dim violet haze of distance, of history and Mexico and the gulf-sea.

But the river is haunted, the city is haunted, the valley and the mountains and the silent desert are haunted—troubled, vexed, by ghosts, phantoms, and vagrant spirits.

You can hear them—down along the river, shaking and whispering in the leaves of the old cottonwoods; if you go there you must hear them. Or out on the west mesa, around the black craters of the volcanoes—phantoms hissing and moaning with the wind. Or up there among the red cliffs and pinnacles, in those immense gulfs of space under the mountain’s rim, where the air is cool and sweet with the odor of juniper and lightning, where the mockingbird and the canyon wren and the mourning dove join with the phantoms in their useless keening. And out on the desert away from the river and the valley, far out beyond the volcanoes, you may see one whirling and whistling like a devil up some dry rocky wash, snapping the brittle lances of the yucca with the violence of its hate—

It was into this valley of ghosts and smoke and unacknowledged sorrows that The Cowboy rode, one morning in October not so many years ago….

PART ONE
The Cowboy

“…
Riding in from the desert to the west
coming from God knows where
…”

1

H
E
WAS
SITTING
ON
HIS
HEELS
IN
THE
COLD
LIGHT
of the dawn, drawing pale flames through a handful of twigs and dry crushed grass. Beside him was his source of fuel: a degenerate juniper tree, shriveled and twisted, cringing over its bed of lava rock and sand. An under-privileged juniper tree, living not on water and soil but on memory and hope. And almost alone. To the north across the rolling mesa of lava there was a broad scattering of junipers, perhaps two or three to an acre, but here where the man squatted before his fire there was only the one, and south and west of the five volcanoes there were none at all, nothing organic but a rudimentary form of bunch grass and the tough spiny yucca.

The man coaxing his tinder into flame was not much interested in the burnt-out wasteland around him. Occasionally he would glance to the southeast and toward the city several miles away, stretched out like a long gray shadow on the other side of the river, or would take a look at the chestnut mare limping among the black rocks beyond the wash, its forelegs held stiffly together, its iron shoes scraping on the stone. But for the most part he concentrated his attention on his small sprightly fire and when he did look away from it his hands continued their work of breaking and adding sticks of wood.

After a while, when the fire had been built up to about the size of a small fryingpan and a residue of glowing charcoal had accumulated, he lifted a canteen
from a branch of the tree, filled a small smoke-blackened pan with water and pushed it lidless halfway into the bed of the fire. He watched it closely for several minutes, waiting for the first globule of superheated air to appear on the bottom of the pan. As he waited he broke a dead stick into short lengths and laid the pieces carefully on the embers.

A cool morning, even in the sunlight. Surfaces exposed to the sun were becoming warm but the air remained chill and sharp, as though the sunlight passed from source to object without heating the intervening medium.

The bubble appeared. The man reached out toward the juniper and pulled a wrinkled beaten old cavalry saddlebag close to his heel, unbuckled its one remaining strap and removed from the interior a black skillet, battered and ancient, then a cylindrical tin labeled Handyman Tube Patching Kit, a can of pork and beans, a punch-type canopener and a slab of salted mutton wrapped in a greasy back copy of the Duke City
Journal.

The mare on the other side of the wash was staring toward the river, flexing her soft rubbery nostrils, twitching her ears. There was a dim fragrance of tamarisk in the air, and a tension, an electricity, in the old aching silence.

The man wiped his nose once on his sleeve, sniffing a little, then unwrapped the mutton, opened his jack-knife and sawed several strips of meat into the skillet, which he set directly on the fire. A dimple in the bottom of the skillet reversed its curvature with a sudden ping, like a plucked violin string, making one of the slices jump. He wiped the blade of the knife on his jeans, closed it and put in back in his pocket, while the meat sizzled and smoked in the skillet. He opened the can of beans and poured them over the meat; the gluey mess spread steaming around the mutton strips, spluttering against the hot metal.

By now the water was simmering in the open pan, its
surface beginning to vaporize. The man unscrewed the lid from the tube patching kit and emptied a certain amount of a brown granular material into the water, measuring by eye. Instantly the aroma of hot coffee graced the air and an involuntary smile appeared on his hungry, lean face.

Within five minutes everything was ready, or ready enough, and ready almost simultaneously: the coffee cooked and diffused densely through the boiling water, the mutton fried, the beans hot and smoky. The man began to eat, using his fingers for the meat, scooping the beans from the skillet with a sawed-off tablespoon and gulping down the scalding coffee in quick short draughts direct from the pan.

When he was finished he leaned back against the bole of the crouching juniper, wiped his mouth on the back of his hand and sighed contentedly. After a moment he pulled at the yellow string dangling from his shirtpocket and drew out a small white cotton sack of tobacco. He reached in the pocket, groping with thumb and forefinger, and found a packet of wheat-straw cigarette papers. He took one of the papers—thin, brown, not gummed—and holding it delicately between his thumb and middle finger, half-rolled to form a trough, he opened the sack with his other hand and tapped out some of the cheap arid pulverized tobacco onto the paper. He tightened the drawstrings of the sack with a hand and his teeth and put it back in his shirtpocket Then with the thumbs and forefingers of both hands he rolled the paper around the evenly-distributed tobacco, moistened the edge of the paper with his tongue, sealed it and gave one end of the somewhat oblate cylinder a half twist. Without a further glance at his work he stuck the cigarette between his lips, scratched a match on his bootsole and lit it. Drawing, tasting, releasing the first mouthful of smoke, he stretched out his long, thin legs, relaxing, and stared at the city beyond the river.

BOOK: The Brave Cowboy
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