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line parted; t would whip。 So maybe half the time Buck and I worked without liaison; doing it dead slow ard depending on his judgment。
If there was not a sound anchor tree properly posi~ ioned
…and it seems to me that this happened more often than not…then we had to wait while I worked something out。 This cOuld be anything: a sling between two trees; then rig a fairlead to a third tree… A bare…rock anchor using driven pitons
…I hated these as I had to do my checking right at the rear axle; walking behind; and God help us all if I stumbled。 Then that was always followed by the time…consuming chore of salvaging those pitons…the harder the rock; the better the anchor; but the tougher the job of getting them out…and I had to get them out; I would need them farther along。
Sometimes no trees and … no rock… Once the anchor was twelve mules faced back along the trail; with Dora soothing them while I checked at a rear axle and Bu~k controlled the progress。
On the prairie we often made thirty kilometers a day。 Once we were through Hopeless Pass and had started down the gorge the distance made good over the ground could be zero for days on end while I prepared the trail ahead; then up to as high as ten kilometers if there were no steep pitches that required rappelling down by line。 I used just one unbreakable
rule: The trail bad to be fully prepared ~from one turnaround base to the next before a wagon was moved。
Minerva; it was so confounded slow that my 〃calendar〃 caught up with me; the sow littered…and we were not out of the mountains。 …
I don't recall ever making a harder decision。 Dora was in good shape; but she was halfway through her pregnancy~ Turn back (as I had promised myself; without teffing her)… or push on and hope to reach lower and fairly level ground' before she came to term? Which would be easier on…her?
I had to consult her…but I had to decide。 Responsibility cannot be shared。 I knew how she would vote before I took the matter up with her: Push on。
But that would be simply her gallant courage; I was the one with experience both in wilderness trekking and in childbirth problems。
I studied those photomaps again without learning anything new。 Somewhere ahead the gorge opened out into a broad river valley…but how far? I didn't know because I didn't know where we were。 We had started with an odometer on the right rear wheel of the lead wagon; I had reset it to zero at the pass…and it had lasted only a day or two; a rock or something did it in。 I didn't even know how much altitude we had managed to drop since the pass; or how much more we must lose to get down。
Livestock 。and equipment: fair。 We had lost two mules。 Pretty Girl had wandered over the edge one night and broken a leg; all I could do for her was to put her out of her misery。 I didn't butcher her … because we had fresh meat and I could not do it where the other mules could not see it; anyhow。 John Barleycorn had simply upped and died one night…orpossibly lost to a loper; he was partly eaten when we found him。 …
Three hens were dead and two piglets failed to make it; but the sow seemed willing to suckle the others。
I had only two spare wheels left。 Lose two more and the next broken wheel meant abandoning one wagon。
It was the wheels that made up my mind。
(Omitted: approximately 7;000 words which reiterate difilculties in getting down the gorge。)
When we came out on that plateau; we could see the valley
stretching out before us。…
A beautiful valley; Miner…va; wide and green and lovely… thousands and thousands of hectares of ideal farmland。 The river from the gorge; tame now; meandered lazily between low banks。 Facing us; a long; long way off; was a high peak crowned with snow。 Its snow line let me guess how high it was…around six thousand meters; for we had now dropped down into subtropics; and only a very high mountain could keep so much snow through a long and very hot summer。
That beautiful mountain; that lush green valley; gave me…a feeling of d閖?vu。 Then I placed it: Mount Hood in the land of my birth back on old Earth; as I bad first seen it as a young man。 'But this valley; this snowcapped peak; had never before been seen by men。
I called out to Buck to halt the march。 〃Dorable; we're home。 In sight of it; somewhere down in that valley。〃
〃'Home;' 〃 she repeated。 〃Oh; my darling!〃
〃Doa't sniffle。〃…
〃I wasn't sniffling!〃 she answered; sniffling。 〃But I've got an awful good cry saved up and when I get time to; I'm going to use it。〃
… 〃All right; ;dear;〃 I agreed; 〃when you have time。 Let's name that mountain 'Dora Mountain。'〃
She looked thoughtful。 〃No; that's not' its name。 That's Mount Hope。 And all this below is Happy Valley。〃
〃Durable Dora; you're incurably sentimental。〃
〃You should talk!〃 She patted her belly; swollen almost to term。 〃That's Happy Valley because it's whe're I'm going to have this hungry little beast 。 。 and that's Mount Hope because it is。〃
Buck had e back to the first wagon and was waiting to find out why we had stopped。 〃Buck;〃 I said; pointing; 〃that's home out there。 We made it。 Home; boy。 Farm。〃
Buck looked out over the valley。 〃Ogay。〃
…in his sleep; … Minerva。 Not lopers; there wasn't a mark on Buck。 Massive coronary; I think; although I didn't cut him open to find out。 He was simply old and tired。 Before we left; I had tried to put him to pasture with John Magee。 But Buck didn't want that。 We were his family; Dora and Beulah and I; and he wanted to e along。 So I made him mule boss and didn't work him…I mean I never rode him and never had him in harness。 He did work; as mule boss; and his patient good judgment got us safely to Happy Valley。 We would not have made it without him。
Maybe he could have lived a few years longer turned out to pasture。 Or be might have pined away frdm loneliness soon after we left。 Who's to judge?
I' didn't even consider butchering him; I think Dora would have miscarried if I had so much as broached the idea。 But it is foolish to bury a mule when lopers and weather will soon take care of his carcass。 So I buried him。
It takes an hellacious big hole to bury a mule; if it hadn't been soft river…bottom loam; I'd be there yet。
But first I had to deal with personnel problems。 Ken was just junior to Beulab in the water queue and was a steady; strong mule who talked fairly well。 On the other hand; Beulah had been Buck's straw boss the whole trek…but I could not recall a gang of mules bossed by a mare。 … …
Minerva; with H。 sapiens this would not matter; at least not today on Secundus。 But with some sorts of animals it does matter。 A boss elephant is female。 A boss chicken is a cock; not a hen。 A boss dog can be either sex。 In a breed where sex controls the matter a man had better by a damn sight go along with their ways。
I decided to see if Beulah could swing it; so I told her to。 line 'em up for harness; both as a test