<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<h3>THE SHEEP HUNTERS.</h3>
<p>Davy Jones had made all his arrangements.
He had only to press the button, when the slight
"click" told that his picture was an accomplished
fact, and that if the hunters did as well, the expedition
might be set down as a glorious success.</p>
<p>Davy had carried his shotgun fastened to his
back with a strap, while he worked his little camera.
Now he reached out for the gun, although realizing
the folly of trying to do any execution at that distance
with buckshot cartridges.</p>
<p>"Now!" said the guide, suddenly.</p>
<p>It would seem as though he spoke aloud purposely,
knowing what the effect was apt to be.
Every feeding big-horn raised its head instantly,
and for the space of several seconds stood there as
though carved out of stone.</p>
<p>A better chance for a shot could not be imagined.</p>
<p>"Bang!"</p>
<p>"Whang!"</p>
<p>That was Smithy firing first, and the second report
told that Step Hen's little thirty-thirty was on
the job instantly.</p>
<p>One big-horn sheep fell over on the rock, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Page 131]</SPAN></span>
kicked several times. It might have fallen over the
ledge only that somehow the body seemed to become
fast in a crotch; and there it lay in a tantalizing
position, for only by a most difficult climb
downward could it be reached at all.</p>
<p>"Oh! I hit mine, and he's fallen down there!"
cried Smithy in a voice that just thrilled with wild
exultation; and hardly had he said this than he
added, in a deeply crushed tone: "Oh! wasn't that
too cruel of him now, to just bound off on his horns
like they were skies, and get on his feet again?
There he goes now, and see him limp, will you,
fellows? I hit him, yes, I surely did!"</p>
<p>"Well, he's gone, and that's the last you're likely
to see of him, more's the pity," said Step Hen;
"but look at <i>my</i> game, would you, stuck there in
among them rocks? Toby, we must manage to get
him, some way or other. Tell me how it can be
done, won't you?"</p>
<p>The guide scratched his head, as if himself a bit
puzzled.</p>
<p>"Only one way I kin see, boys," he observed,
"and that means a lot more climbing for us."</p>
<p>"You mean we'll just have to work around, and
get up there above the place where <i>my</i> big-horn lies,
as dead as a door nail; is that it, Toby?" questioned
Step Hen, perhaps unconsciously placing great
emphasis on that pronoun; nor could he be blamed
for feeling proud, if half that the guide had told
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Page 132]</SPAN></span>
them concerning the difficulties encountered by
hunters of Rocky Mountain sheep were true.</p>
<p>"Just what I had in mind," replied Toby.</p>
<p>"Then let's make a start," urged Step Hen.
"My stars! I wouldn't like to lose that splendid
fellow for anything. Just think of having that pair
of horns to put in our club room at home, Davy.
I hope you got a good picture, too; because we c'n
have an enlargement taken, and hang it under <i>my</i>
horns."</p>
<p>"I don't see any growing out of your head, yet,
Step Hen," chuckled Davy, as he and the third
scout fell in behind the others, and started forth.</p>
<p>One thing made it a little easier now; they did
not have to be so particular about moving softly,
since their aim had been accomplished, and they had
shot their bolt.</p>
<p>But the way was rough enough at the best.
Smithy had a hard time of it. He was forever
bruising his hands, for they were not so tough in
the palms as those of the other boys, who had been
accustomed to work and hard play. Besides, often
he took a little slide and in this fashion tore his
trousers as well as made quite a gash in his leg.
But the other boys rather fancied that Smithy,
unable to wholly overcome his former love for fine
clothes, grieved more on account of that big rent
in his khaki trousers, than he did for the bleeding
leg, though it must have pained him considerably.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Page 133]</SPAN></span>
Still, he did not murmur; Smithy was showing
much more grit than either of the others had ever
dreamed he possessed. Like Bumpus, it only
seemed to need a fitting opportunity to come to the
surface; as is the case with many backward boys.</p>
<p>As they turned an angle of the rocks, Step Hen
gave a shout.</p>
<p>"What's this? What's this?" he called.</p>
<p>"Oh! please don't shoot!" shrilled Smithy,
wonderfully excited again; "It must be the sheep
I struck with my bullet; see how the poor thing
drags that leg after him? Let me have the pleasure
of knocking him over, and putting him out of
pain?"</p>
<p>"Get busy then, or he'll give you the slip after
all. Quick, Smithy, or I'll be tempted to shoot him
myself. Whoop! you did it that time, Smithy!
Good boy!" and Step Hen fairly danced in his
excitement.</p>
<p>Smithy had made good. How he did it, he
never could tell; but somehow, when he just pointed
his gun in a general way toward the escaping big-horn,
and pulled the trigger, why, the already
badly wounded animal fell over, gave a couple of
last kicks, and then lay still.</p>
<p>But strange to say, Smithy was less given to
excitement over his exploit than either of the other
boys. As they all bent over the big-horn to admire
his sturdy frame, and the head ornaments that distinguish
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Page 134]</SPAN></span>
him among all his kind, Smithy was seen
to stroke the hairy back of the dead sheep, and
clinch his teeth hard together, as though after all
he felt half sorry that a sudden whim had caused
him to actually take a life that nothing could
restore. Evidently it would be some time before
Smithy could so far overcome his former gentle
traits of character to feel the hunter's fierce lust
for his quarry.</p>
<p>"But this ain't getting <i>my</i> big-horn, you know,"
remarked Step Hen, as though the feel of those
massive curved head-pieces had thrown him into a
new fever of impatience to secure his own trophies;
for it would be a shame if the greenhorn of the
party should be the only one to exhibit positive evidences
of their having shot game.</p>
<p>"Come along then, and we'll soon git around to
whar p'raps ye might climb down, if so be ye're
keerful not to slip," and the guide once more
started off.</p>
<p>"Oh! do we abandon my big-horn, then?" cried
Smithy, as though half tempted to refuse to leave
the spot on what might prove to be a wild-goose
chase; to him it seemed like leaving the substance
to try and catch the shadow.</p>
<p>"We kin come back this way, and take keer of
it then," said Toby; and with this assurance Smithy
had to rest content.</p>
<p>After some further scrambling along the face of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Page 135]</SPAN></span>
the steep slope, digging their toes into the shale
that often crumbled under them, when they might
risk a serious ride down the side of the mountain
only for the fact that they managed to cling fast
with their hands, they reached a point where it
was extra rocky, and a pretty sheer descent.</p>
<p>"Down thar your sheep lies," the guide said,
pointing as he spoke.</p>
<p>Step Hen immediately laid his gun aside, and
crawling to the edge he looked over.</p>
<p>"I don't see hide or hair of it, though, Toby?"
he complained.</p>
<p>"No more you kin," returned the other, with
decision marked in both voice and manner; "but
all the same it's down thar, not more'n a hundred
feet at most. I got my bearin's fine. Look off
yonder, and yell see whar we lay when ye did the
shootin' at the big horns."</p>
<p>"He's right, Step Hen," said Davy Jones, after
looking to where the guide was pointing so confidently.
"I'd know that rock among a thousand.
I'll never forget it, either. And yes, your sheep
must be lying below us right now."</p>
<p>"I think the same, fellows," asserted Smithy,
who was beginning to feel that he ought to give his
opinion of things after this, since he was now an
actual <i>boni fide</i> hunter, and had even secured one
of the most wary of all wild animals in the whole
West.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Page 136]</SPAN></span>
"But why don't I see it, then?" demanded Step
Hen, always very stubborn, and needing to be
shown.</p>
<p>"Ye see," the guide explained, "the face of the
mountain backs in some, in a general way. That
tells the story. The only thing that bothers me is,
if I had ought to let ye try and get down thar, so's
to shove the sheep off, and land it at the bottom; or
make the riffle myself."</p>
<p>"Oh! I wouldn't think of letting you try it," declared
Step Hen, quickly. "I'm young and spry,
and used to climbing up cliffs and such stunts, besides,"
he added as a clincher, "it's <i>my</i> big horn,
you know."</p>
<p>Had either of the other boys backed him up, the
chances were that Toby Smathers might have refused
to give his permission; for he knew that there
would naturally be considerable risk involved in
such an undertaking; but then both Davy and his
comrade, Smithy, saw nothing so <SPAN name="very" id="very"></SPAN>very unusual in
the proceeding, the one because he was not accustomed
to judging such things; and Davy on
account of being such a clever gymnast himself,
always doing dangerous tricks, such as hanging
from a high limb of a tree by his toes, coming down
the outside of a tree by using the branches as a
descending ladder, and all such "crazy antics," as
Giraffe called them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Page 137]</SPAN></span>
"Here, somebody hold my gun," said Step Hen,
with an air of resolution.</p>
<p>"You're going to be some keerful, I take it?"
questioned the guide, dubiously.</p>
<p>"Course I am; what d'ye take me for, Toby?
Think I want to go to my own funeral in a hurry?
Not much. Oh! I c'n be careful, all right. Don't
you worry about me. And I want that big-horn
worse than ever, I do. Here goes, then."</p>
<p>He started down the face of the almost perpendicular
precipice. There were plenty of places
where he could get a good foothold, and secure
a grip with his ready hands. The only danger
seemed to be, as the guide had warned him, in having
some apparently secure rock suddenly give way
under his weight. He must watch out for that
constantly, and never take a fresh step unless he
was sure he could maintain his hold upon the last
knob of rock.</p>
<p>"Call out if we can help any, Step Hen," was
what Davy said, as they saw the last of their companion's
head just about to vanish, where the first
inward dip to the precipice occurred.</p>
<p>"Sure I will, and just you remember our signal
code, Davy. I may have to use it if I get caught
tight in a crack, and can't break away nohow.
Good-bye, be good to yourselves, now, and don't go
to believin' that there's any chance of me losing
my grip."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Page 138]</SPAN></span>
Then he vanished from their sight. A dreadful
clatter of falling stones gave the two scouts still
above a case of the "trembles" immediately afterwards,
and Davy called at the top of his voice:</p>
<p>"I say, Step Hen!"</p>
<p>"All right;" welled up from somewhere below
them; "did that on purpose to test a stepping place.
Ketch a weasel asleep, before you get me to stand
on a loose place, why, it's as easy as fallin' off a log,
this is."</p>
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