<h2 id="VIII" class="vspace">VIII<br/> <span class="subhead">CAMP CUNNINGHAM<br/> <span class="subhead">THE STORY OF A DAKOTA STORM</span></span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> population of Dakota in the early
days was miscellaneous, to say the least
of it. Men from every part of the world,
from every station in life, and for many reasons,
hobnobbed together in terms of free and
equal intercourse. All social rules were
turned topsy-turvy—or rather, ceased to exist.
You could get a German baron to plow your
garden for you, if you wanted style, and were
not particular about the aim and scope of the
furrows, and perhaps while the baron was
plugging away, desperately struggling to keep
the plow from emulating the exasperated
worm of the old story, Jimmy O’Brien would
come sailing by behind his team of 2:30 trotters
on his way to deposit the money obtained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
by wise government contracts, and sing out a
jovial greeting of “Stick to ’um, Bar’n, old
man rocks! Thot’s th’ road t’ wealth—but
ye’ll be a toird man when you land there!”
And the baron would wave his hand in acknowledgment
of the greeting, and smile
grimly to himself in acknowledgment of the
statement.</p>
<p>All manner of younger sons inhabited the
country, making nonsense of the occupations
they took up under the disguise of earning
an honest living, and for which, as a rule,
they showed a superb incapacity.</p>
<p>One of these scions of a noble house was
James Cecil R. DeG. Cunningham—often
known as Slim Jim or Pelican Cunningham—sometimes
as just plain Cunny. He had a
tent on a homestead on the banks of the
Chantay Seeche River. It was a very clean,
white tent. All the empty tin cans were piled
up outside, like cannon-balls in a fort, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
every morning the estate was carefully “policed.”
No scraps and odds and ends littered
the courtyard of Camp Cunningham.</p>
<p>“Like master, like man,” says the saw, and
in this case truly, for the man Cunningham
was exactly like the master Cunningham-sur-le-Chantay
Seeche. No matter what his
work was, he always managed to look as if
he had just come from the wash—not that
he was beautiful, but he was so chalky clean.
His hair was clean, a peculiar no-color-at-all-cleanliness;
his teeth were clean, and almost
the size of piano-keys, when disclosed by his
wide, good-natured smile; his eyes were pure
white and pale blue. They showed behind
the powerful lenses that corrected their myopia,
like specimens of old china in a cabinet.
They also had something of the trustfulness
and instant claim for sympathy in their short-sighted
stare that one often sees in children’s
eyes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
Cunningham was full six feet two in stature,
bony and loosely put together. His legs were
of such length that Billy Wykam’s remark,
that, “if it wasn’t for his necktie, Cunny would
be twins,” had more foundation in fact than
most hyperbole. But his walking gait was
the most remarkable thing about him physically.
He took immense strides, swinging his
arms to their full extent, in unison, while his
head had a continuous pecking motion. Paul
Falk, our intellectual giant, said that Cunningham
in action looked like a demonstration
of a transverse vibration, and at rest like
Cunningham, and nothing else on this or any
other planet. He was one mortally homely
man, if ever there lived one, yet there was
something high and striking in his long, big-nosed
face, and a genial quality in his perfect
manner that would win you to liking him at
the first meeting and for ever after. His was
the style of the true nobleman, and gained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
for him the respect of the hilarious crew
among whom he lived, despite his oddities.</p>
<p>Many a quiet kindly turn, so carefully contrived
that he never guessed it was a kindness,
he received from his neighbors; and for his
part no man could have been more willing or
useless. With an ax in his hand he was the
most dangerous companion imaginable. He
nearly brained two of the boys before they
could think of an excuse to part him and his
weapon without hurting his feelings, and
when he started to help in an undertaking,
not the least of the troubles of the others was
to render him harmless. On one occasion
Billy Wykam had a matter of twenty or thirty
calves he wished to brand. Cunningham was
in the corral, armed with a rope, intensely
serious and businesslike. He tripped up almost
everybody with the ropes; he “shooed”
the wrong “critters” out of the corral, so that
somebody had to take horses and chase them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
for miles over the prairie until they could
be secured again; he roped Antelope Pete
by mistake when the latter was flying down
the corral towed by a powerful yearling, and
gave Pete a fall that it would take years to
blot out of the spectator’s memory; then in
his zeal he hauled away on the rope, dragging
his victim quite a distance before he could be
stopped.</p>
<p>It was as much as the rest of us could do,
so weak were we from laughing, to prevent
the angry plainsman from laying violent hands
on Cunningham, who, of course, was ignorant
of having given offense. In short, Cunningham
was so persistently where he ought not
to be, and so entirely in everybody’s way, that
some of the boys were like to die of suppressed
profanity. Billy asked Paul for mercy’s sake
to set the man at something where he wouldn’t
be playing the old Harry with things all the
time. Paul elected him to the position of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
branding-iron tender, whose duties are to heat
the irons, and hand them out when needed.
Even here the Englishman distinguished himself,
for, peering near-sightedly around with
a hot iron in his hand, he touched Billy’s
buckskin bronco on the flank with it. The
ugly little beast promptly kicked Cunningham
into the fire, and then tore around the corral,
spreading disaster and confusion. Poor
Cunny got several bad burns, for which the
rest of us were not as sorry as we should be,
inasmuch as they forced him to knock off for
the day.</p>
<p>If anything could have added to the absurdity
of Cunningham’s performance, it
would be that he was the “perfect gentleman”
all the while; explaining, apologizing,
or hazarding an opinion, it was always with
the little graces of the drawing-room. How
ludicrous this manner is in a rushing, dusty,
hot, swearing cattle-corral is a thing that has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
to be seen to be appreciated. We always
tried to secure Cunningham’s services elsewhere
when we had something on hand which
we really wished to put through. The man
had a modest pride in his tent that it would
have been wicked to disturb, yet for his safety’s
sake it became a friendly duty to drop
him a word of warning. He had landed in
the country in the spring, and hitherto the
weather had been delightful, without an omen
of the furious storms that were sure to come
during the summer. It seemed to us that his
tent wouldn’t amount to much in the grass of
Dakota, but we didn’t like to tell him so. At
last we appointed Neighbor Case our commissioner
to acquaint Cunningham with some
facts we thought he had overlooked. After
praising the tent and its surroundings, Neighbor
came to the heart of his message.</p>
<p>“It’s mighty nice—mighty nice, Lengthy,
he said. “Yet, if you want my advice, I’ll tell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
you what I’d do; I’d take a half hitch around
a boulder with them guy-ropes, if I was you.
Even then, you wouldn’t have no sure thing.
Wait till you see one of our little breezes
come cantering over the prairies, son; you’ll
wish you had a cast-iron tent, fastened to the
bowels of the earth with bridge-bolts.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure I thank you awfully, old man,
for your interest, you know,” replied Cunningham,
“but,” inspecting his moorings carefully
through his glasses, “I think she’ll stand
it. The pressure of the wind on a normal
surface is only two pounds to the square foot,
for a velocity of twenty miles an hour, and,
of course, on oblique surfaces—like the tent-walls—much
less, much less. Why, even in
the cases of exceptional storms, the pressure
does not rise above eighty or ninety pounds,
and as I was careful to get only the best of
canvas and cordage, she should stand that,
don’t you think?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
Neighbor Case was impressed, if not converted.
“That’s a great head you have on
you, Lengthy,” he said admiringly. “You
seem to know old Mr. Wind’s ways as well
as if you and he had played in the back yard
together when you was boys; but I want to
tell you something. He may act like that in
books, and only press you for so many pounds
as you tell me about when you’re normal and
he’s hitting a certain gait, but you can’t tell
what he’ll do when he gets you out here all
alone on the prairies. He may forget the
rules and press you just as hard as he darn
pleases; or he may shift the cut and knock you
into a cocked hat before you can get the books
out to show what he ought to do. No,
Lengthy, book-learning is good, and you won’t
catch me saying nothing agin it; but if I was
you, I’d let it slide on this occasion, and tie
her up to a boulder.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
Cunningham, however, had a trait in common
with many gentle-natured people—that
of mild obstinacy—and he stuck to his tent
just as it was.</p>
<p>We could not urge him further, so there
the matter dropped—until the day of the
storm, then several other things came to earth.</p>
<p>We woke one morning to find the country
wrapped in a fury of red light—not the cheery
glow of daybreak, but a baleful crimson, as
though it were raining blood on a world of
fire. In the west a massive heap of storm was
rolling, against whose murky blackness the
small buttes stood out ruddily. It was a boiling
storm; the vapors curled and twisted in
a way that meant wind and hail, and plenty
of both.</p>
<p>“By the great Hohokus! We’re going to
catch it this trip,” said Billy, and the three
who composed the household of his ranch began<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
scrambling about in nervous haste, gathering
up the things that might be blown away
by wind.</p>
<p>In the middle of it he called out to me,
“Say, Hank, don’t you think we ought to give
old Cunny a lift? Here’s where his shanty
comes down, sure!”</p>
<p>This was more than kind of Billy, for about
the only thing in the world he feared was
thunder and lightning, and this filled him
with a dread that neither his strong will nor
good sense could in the least abate or control.</p>
<p>Of course, I could not refuse. We started
on a run for Camp Cunningham, a mile or so
down the river. Yet, though the distance was
so small, we had reason to doubt that we could
cover it. Half-way, a hailstone the size of
a child’s fist went whistling over our heads,
ricocheted along the sod in great bounds; then
came another and another—the skirmish fire
of the storm.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
The suggestive “thwuck” of these missiles
as they took the ground made me draw in my
head as far as possible—like a turtle.</p>
<p>I was just wondering what effect one of
them would have on the human body, when
a big fellow smashed fairly against the side
of Billy’s head—a sounding blow which
knocked the sturdy little man staggering.</p>
<p>“We’ve got to get out of this,” he said,
grinding his teeth in pain, “or we’ll be slaughtered!”</p>
<p>A trickle of blood from a cut in his head
bore witness that this was not a figure of
speech. Let any one who doubts the Lethal
quality of a Dakota hail-storm stand out in
the open while a dozen or so expert ball-pitchers
open fire on him with pieces of ice,
weighing up to half a pound (the actual conditions
of the storms are sometimes a worse
matter than this comes to), and I fancy he will
soon be changed from a skeptic to a fanatic.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
If I had any doubts they were instantly removed
by a rap on the arm which numbed it
to the finger-tips. For a moment we hesitated,
but it was too far back to the ranch, so
we broke for the scant cover of some bullberry
bushes on the hitherside of Cunningham’s
coulée.</p>
<p>As we flattened ourselves behind these the
real storm was on us in a breath. We were
stunned by the uproar; the all-pervading
heavy drumming of rain and hail, and the hiss
of their passage; the yelling and booming of
the wind, and the thunder that smote the earth,
crash upon crash, like the blows of a hammer.
We did not think—we held on tight and
waited. One could not see ten feet into the
gray of falling ice and water, and the rush of
it nearly took one’s senses away. It all but
turned the level prairie into a seething lake,
and the slopes into rapids. Suddenly the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
downpour ceased almost as abruptly as it began,
and nothing remained but the wind. I
say “nothing,” because that is our idiom. I do
not use the word in a depreciatory sense, for
we had full realization of what force there is
in mere air in motion that morning. It swept
across the prairie in one great tide of power.
There was not a flutter nor break in it. It
jammed us down in the mud, and then held
us there. At first it seemed as if our heads
would be whipped off our shoulders if we
dared lift them up into the full swing of it.
But this acme of energy passed at last, and
we turned our eyes down the coulée to see
how our friend had fared.</p>
<p>Tent Cunningham had so far fulfilled its
architect’s expectations. A swollen yellow
river from the coulée washed its edge and it
was plastered with mud by the hailstones, but
otherwise uninjured.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
“He’s—weathered—it!” roared Billy in my
ear. “Yes,” I answered, “coulée—bank—protected—him.
He’s—all—right—if—”</p>
<p>I was going to say “if the wind doesn’t
shift.” But before the words were out the
wind had shifted.</p>
<p>Rrrr-oooo-oof! It shrieked down the coulée
and with a snapping and a cracking, like a
small Fourth of July celebration, away went
Tent Cunningham. The canvas rose in the
air, flapping tragically; and beneath it, galloping
in frantic haste, were the longest and
thinnest legs in the world, as poor Cunningham,
caught in the folds, was hustled onward.
We could see nothing of him but legs, and
as the flying tent bore a rude semblance to
the human figure, the combination looked like
a gigantic ghost, with slender black legs,
hurrying off to haunt somebody.</p>
<p>Such leaps and bounds as Cunningham
made were never equaled by the winner of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
any Olympia, ancient or modern; and such
another vision never was beheld outside the
course of a nightmare. There was a fever of
madness in its curvetings, its gesticulations, its
wild plunges.</p>
<p>Down into the Chantay Seeche, all a-suds
from the recent bombardment, the specter
swooped, and then came a mighty struggling
and floundering.</p>
<p>Surely no more ignominious death could be
furnished the offspring of a noble house than
to be held down by a tent and drowned in
two feet of water!</p>
<p>We sprang, nay, we flew to his assistance,
for once on our feet the wind scurried us
ahead whether we would or no. We spaudered
and slid over the slippery mud, like novices
on skates, and we should have over-shot
our quarry but that we grabbed at the tent
in passing.</p>
<p>Now, it turned out to be in nowise so easy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
to get the man out as you might think, for the
moment we lifted a fold of the canvas it
caught the air like a kite, and down we went,
under it, or over it, as the case appeared. In
the former instance, it was no small job for us
to get ourselves out again, let alone helping
Cunningham. The very devil was in the tent,
and it began to look as if the man would be
drowned right under our hands, when it occurred
to me to cut the knot of our complications.</p>
<p>I passed my knife over a bulging place
which I judged held some part of the victim,
and instantly the head of James Cecil R. DeG.
Cunningham popped through the opening—a
head from whose mouse-colored whiskers
and long nose the water dripped pathetically,
and which regarded us with injured but vacant
near-sighted eyes.</p>
<p>Poor Cunny! His mind must have been
thoroughly addled by the events of the morning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
for the first words he spoke—in the tone
of one declining an ice—were: “I don’t like
this kind of thing at all, y’ know!”</p>
<p>“You don’t, eh?” said Billy. “Well, if it’s
the last act, I’m going to laugh.”</p>
<p>He surely did laugh, and I with him. We
howled, and splashed, and slapped our legs
until we were too weak to stand up, and then
we sat right down in the water. Cunny set
up a stentorian “haw-haw” out of pure good
nature, and the sight of him, with his tent
around him like a toga, full of dignity, but
willing to oblige, as usual, went near to finish
us.</p>
<p>“Don’t look at me, Cunny, don’t!” begged
Billy. “If you look at me again like that,
I’ll die right here!”</p>
<p>“Very good! Very good, indeed! Haw,
haw, haw!” replied Cunningham.</p>
<p>In the middle of the hilarity there came a
hail from the river bank in a voice of wonder.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
It was Antelope Pete, mounted, on his way to
Billy’s to compare notes on the morning’s
flood.</p>
<p>Now, Antelope is a very serious-minded
man for the country, and it wouldn’t be well
to repeat all the different things he said might
happen him if he ever saw the like of this
before.</p>
<p>“Do you fellows always go out in the middle
of the river to crack jokes in thunder-storms?”
he demanded. “What in blazes is the matter
with you, anyhow?”</p>
<p>We tried to explain, but we couldn’t get
three words out before we were in roars again,
and Pete was perfectly disgusted.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m going to leave,” said he. “I’ve
got something else better to do besides sitting
here watching the most all-fired, copper-riveted,
three-ply, double-backed-action damn
fools that it was ever my luck to come acrost.”</p>
<p>We prevailed upon him, however, to throw<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
us his rope, and as Cunningham was so fearfully
and wonderfully entangled in the tent
that it would have been next to impossible to
extricate him, we tied the line to a corner of
the tent. Antelope then laid the quirt on his
cayuse, and man and mansion were hauled up
the bank together.</p>
<p>When we reached a state of mind where we
could discuss the matter calmly, we asked
Cunningham if he still intended to live in
the tent. Oh, yes, yes, indeed! The tent was
all right; it was the wind that was wrong.
Then followed a learned disquisition on vacuums,
and worlds, and other meteorological
phenomena which stumped us completely.
Indeed, it came to my mind that Cunningham
almost proved that he and the tent never
went into the Chantay Seeche.</p>
<p>Part of his theory which I can remember
is that the wind, in passing over the coulée,
partially exhausted the air beneath it, like the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
action of an atomizer, he explained to our
unscientific minds. And thus Tent Cunningham
was drawn up and on to disaster most
unlawfully. The idea of Cunningham and
the tent being “atomized” into the creek strikes
me as being particularly good. I feel still
more entertained when I think of the tin cans,
the ham, the bacon, the lantern, the little sheet-iron
cooking-stove, various articles of clothing,
et cetera, which were included in the
spray.</p>
<p>It is perhaps needless to add that the gathering
of all these was the work of most of a
morning. I don’t believe I ever saw anything
more pathetic than the little stove stranded
on a bar some distance down the river, its tiny
legs lifted in appeal to the now speckless
heavens. Perhaps it was thinking of the untimely
fate of the frying pan and kettle that
had warmed themselves at its fires so often.</p>
<p>When Cunningham gazed upon this jettisoned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
cargo his face betrayed his feelings.
His soul, which loved cleanliness, order, and
system with a blind worship, revolted. One
could see that it was in his mind for the moment
to “jump the country,” but it passed.
The determination and courage which were
at the bottom of the man’s nature rose in force,
and he busied himself in restoring the former
status, singing a loud air without any tune
to it, the while. The territory of Dakota was
a large country—some of the belongings never
appeared again. It is pleasant to think that
Cunningham’s card-case may have fallen into
the hands of a wandering Indian, and thus
spread the refinements of civilization.</p>
<p>It seemed that our friend was going to buck
the elements on first principles—put up the
tent in the same old way, and have it blown
to Halifax in the same old way to a dead certainty.
There was no more use in trying to
argue with him on the subject than if it were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
a question of politics; but Billy, who used
more tact in one minute than I could understand
in ten, turned the point without the least
friction.</p>
<p>He asked Cunningham to expound the theory
of the levitation of the tent again. It was
done, at length, and breadth, and thickness.</p>
<p>“Now, as I understand it,” said Billy, “a
vacuum’s a place where there ain’t anything,
and when things try to get in it makes trouble—are
my sights at the right elevation?”</p>
<p>I assured him he was correct so far.</p>
<p>“Well, then, see here, Cunny, why don’t
you kind of fill in around the tent with sods?
You can’t make much of a vacuum out of good
deep-cut sods, I’ll bet my wardrobe. You
see the place where the vacuum would have
to be, to do you dirt, will be occupied and it
can vacuumize all it wants to around the
prairie after that, and you needn’t care.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
“An ex-cellent idea! “cried Cunningham.
“I thank you very much, Mr. Wykam.”</p>
<p>So it came to pass that Tent Cunningham
was surrounded by a wall of sod eight feet
high and four feet thick. The only criticism
I heard was from a stranger who put up at
Billy’s for a while.</p>
<p>One morning he came in and took me by
the shoulder, “Come with me,” he said. We
went on until Tent Cunningham hove in sight.</p>
<p>“I’ve seen lots of what strikes me as strange
things in this country,” the stranger said, “but
that place knocks the spots off the cards.
Would you be kind enough to tell me what
that wild-Injun-peaceful-settler contraption
is?”</p>
<p>“That?” I asked with a sober face. “Why,
that’s Camp Cunningham.”</p>
<p>“I dare say it is,” he returned. “But that
ain’t the point I was looking for. What I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
want to know is, why did the population go
to all the trouble of building a sod house, and
then put up a tent inside of it?”</p>
<p>“Merely a question of taste—it’s his hundred
and sixty; why shouldn’t he build what
he likes on it?”</p>
<p>“That’s so, too,” replied the stranger. “Excuse
me for meddling; it’s a free country, if
ever there was one.”</p>
<p>So the matter dropped right there.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span></p>
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