With his tongue in his cheek, literally,
and perspiring like a blacksmith, Teeters sat at the
table in the kitchen of the Scissor Ranch house, and
by the flickering light of a candle in a lard can wrote
letters to the heads of the Vanderbilt and Astor families,
to the President and those of his Cabinet whose names
he could remember.
Briefly, but in a style that was intimate
and slightly humorous, Teeters conveyed the information
that he was starting a dude ranch, and if they were
thinking of taking an outing the coming summer they
would be treated right at the “Scissor”
or have their money refunded. He guaranteed a
first class A1 cook, with a signed contract to wash
his hands before breakfast, a good saddle horse for
each guest, and plenty of bedding.
He did not aim to handle over ten
head of dudes to start with, so, if they wanted to
play safe, they had better answer upon receipt of his
letter, he warned them, signing himself after deliberation:
Yure frend
C. TEETERS
“I’ll bet me I’ll
buy me some lamp chimbleys and heave out this palouser.
A feller can’t half see what he’s doin’,”
he grumbled as he eyed a large blot on the envelope
addressed to the President. “The whole
place,” sourly, “looks like a widdy woman’s
outfit.”
Teeters hammered down the flaps with
a vigor that made the unwashed dishes on the table
rattle, and grinned as he pictured the astonishment
of Major Stephen Douglas Prouty, who was still postmaster,
when he read the names of the personages with whom
he, Teeters, was in correspondence-after
which he looked at the clock and saw that it was only
seven.
So he thrust his hands in the pockets
of his overalls, and, with his chair tilted against
the wall at a comfortable angle, speculated as to
his chances of success in the dude business.
The more Teeters had thought of Mormon
Joe’s assertion that, outside of stock, the
chief asset of the country was its climate and its
scenery, the more he had come to believe that Joe’s
advice to turn the Scissor outfit into a place for
eastern tourists was valuable. It had been done
elsewhere successfully, and there was no dearth of
accommodations on the place, since there was nothing
much to the ranch but the buildings, as Toomey had
fenced and broken up only enough land to patent the
homestead.
Although Teeters was now the ostensible
owner, in reality the place belonged to Hughie Disston’s
father, who had been the heaviest loser in the cattle
company. Hughie had written Teeters that if they
recovered from the reverse, and others that had come
to them, they hoped to re-stock the range that was
left to them and he wished to spend at least a portion
of the year there. In the meantime, it was for
Teeters to do what he could with it.
“Dudes” had seemed to be the answer to
his problem.
While making up his mind, he had not
acted hastily. He had consulted the spirits,
with Mrs. Emmeline Taylor and her ouija board as intermediary.
“Starlight” had thought highly of the undertaking,
and Mrs. Taylor, knowing that Miss Maggie’s
hope chest was full to overflowing, encouraged it.
There had been a time when bankers, railroad and other
magnates had been in her dreams for her daughter, and
a mere rancher like Teeters was unthinkable, but with
the passing of the years she had modified her ambitions
somewhat. So she had said benignly, patting his
shoulder:
“The angels will look after
you, as they have after me. Don’t be afraid,
Clarence.”
It had occurred to Clarence that the
not inconsiderable herd of Herefords Mr. Taylor had
left behind him at “Happy Wigwam” might
have had as much to do with Mrs. Taylor’s feeling
of security as the guardianship of the angels, but
he answered merely, though somewhat cryptically:
“Even if I lose my money it
won’t cost me nothin’-I worked
for it.”
Teeters glanced at the clock, yawned
as he saw that the hands pointed to half past seven,
and unhooked his heels from the rung of the chair
preparatory to retiring.
A horse snorted, and the sound of
hoofs on the frozen dooryard brought Teeters to attention.
What honest person could be out jamming around this
time of night, he wondered.
In preparation for callers he reached
for his cartridge belt and holster that hung on a
nail and laid them on the table.
The door opened and a stranger entered,
blinking. The fringe of icicles hanging from
his moustache looked like the contrivance to curtail
the activities of cows given to breaking and entering.
“I seen you through the winder,” he said
apologetically.
“I heard your horse whinner,” Teeters
replied, politely, rising.
“This banany belt’s gittin’
colder every winter.” The stranger broke
off an icicle and laid it on the stove to hear it
sizzle.
“I was jest fixin’ to
turn in,” Teeters hinted. “Last night
I didn’t sleep good. I tossed and thrashed
around until half-past eight ’fore I closed
my eyes.”
“I won’t keep you up,
then. I come over on business. Bowers’s
my name. I’m a-workin’ for Miss Prentice.
I’m a sheepherder myself by perfession.”
Teeters received the announcement
with equanimity, so he continued:
“Along about two o’clock
this afternoon I got an idea that nigh knocked me
over. I bedded my sheep early and took a chance
on leavin’ them, seein’ as it was on her
account I wanted to talk to you. You’re
a friend of her’n, ain’t you?”
“To the end of the road,” Teeters replied
soberly.
Bowers nodded.
“So somebody told me. Are you goin’
to town anyways soon?”
“To-morrow.”
“Good! Will you take a message to Lingle?”
Teeters assented.
“Tell him for me that the night
of the murder there was a onery breed-lookin’
feller that smelt like a piece of Injun-tanned buckskin
a settin’ in Doc Fussel’s drug store.
He acted oneasy, as I come to think it over, and he
went out jest before the killin’. I never
thought of it at the time, but he might have been
the feller that done it.”
“I’ll tell Lingle, but I don’t think
there’s anything in it.”
“Why?”
Teeters’ eyes narrowed.
“Because I know where the gun come from!”
Bowers looked his astonishment.
“I’d swear to that gun
stock on a stack of Bibles,” Teeters continued.
“It was swelled from layin’ in water, and
a blacksmith riveted it. The blacksmith died
last summer or by now we’d a had his affidavit.”
“Ain’t that sick’nin’!”
Bowers referred to the exasperating demise of the
blacksmith.
“Anyway, Lingle’s workin’
like a horse on the case, and I think he’ll
clear it up directly. How’s she standin’
it?”
“Like a soldier.”
“She’s got sand.”
“She’s made of it,” laconically,
“and I aims to stay by her.”
Teeters hesitated; then, for the first
time in his life he gave his hand to a sheepherder,
and, at parting, as further evidence that the caste
line was down between them, said heartily:
“Come over next Sunday and eat
with me; I got six or eight cackle-berries I been
savin’ fur somethin’ special.”
“Thanks. Aigs is my favor-ite fruit,”
Bowers replied appreciatively.
The next day Teeters went into the
post office at Prouty with more letters than he had
written in all his life together. The Major was
at the window perspiring under the verbal attack of
a highly incensed lady.
A deeply interested listener, Teeters
gathered that the postmaster’s faulty orthography
was to blame for the contumely heaped upon him.
In vain the Major protested his innocence of any malicious
intent when, after hearing a rumor to the effect that
the lady had died during an absence from Prouty, he
wrote “diseased” upon a letter addressed
to her, and returned it to the sender.
“I’m goin’ to sue
you for libel!” was her parting shot at him.
“Like as not she’ll do
it,” said the Major, despondently, and added
with bitterness, “I wisht I’d died before
I got this post office! Teeters,” he continued,
impressively, “lemme tell you somethin’:
anybody can git a post office by writin’ a postal
card to Washington, but men have gone down to their
graves tryin’ to git rid of ’em. The
only sure way is to heave ’em into the street
and jump out o’ the country between sundown
and daylight.
“I’ve met fellers hidin’
in the mountains that I used to think was fugitive
murderers-they had all the earmarks-but
now I know better; they was runnin’ away from
third-and fourth-class post offices. If ever
you’re tempted, remember what I’ve told
you. Anything I can do for you, Teeters?”
Teeters threw out his mail carelessly.
“Just weigh up them letters, will you?”
The name of the head of the Astor
family caught the postmaster’s eyes and he looked
his astonishment.
“I’m expectin’ him out next summer,”
Teeters said casually.
“You don’t say?” with a mixture
of respect and skepticism. “Visitin’?”
“Not exactly visitin’-he’ll
pay for stayin’. I’m tellin’
you private that I’m goin’ to wrangle
dudes next season. I made him a good proposition
and I think it’ll ketch him.”
“It would be a good ad. for
the country,” said the Major, thoughtfully.
“But wouldn’t you be afraid he’d
get lonesome out there with nobody passin’?”
“I’ve thought over this
consider’ble,” Teeters lowered his voice,
“and I figger that the secret of handlin’
dudes is to keep ’em busy. I’ve been
around ’em a whole lot, off an’ on, over
on the Yellastone, and I’ve noticed that the
best way to get anythin’ done is to tell ’em
not to touch it and then go off and leave ’em.
Of course an out-an’-out dude is a turrible
nuisance, and dang’rous, but you got to charge
enough to cover the damage he does tryin’ to
be wild and woolly.”
He went on confidentially: “Between
you and me, I’ve worked out a scale of prices
for allowin’ ’em to help me-so
much for diggin’ post holes and stretchin’
wire, so much for shinglin’ a roof or grubbin’
sagebrush. Only the very wealthy can afford to
drive a wagon and spread fertilizer, or clean out
the corral and cowshed, and it’ll take a bank
account to pitch alfalfa in hayin’. If
they thought I wanted ’em to help, or needed
’em, they’d laugh at me.”
“Dudes is peculiar,” the
Major admitted. “I never had much truck
with ’em, but I knowed a feller in the Jackson
Hole County that made quite a stake out of dudin’.
They took him to Warm Springs afterward-he’d
weakened his mind answerin’ questions-but
he left his family well pervided for. Teeters,”
earnestly, “why don’t you put your money
in somethin’ substantial-stock in
the Ditch Company, or Prouty real estate?”
Teeters shook his head.
“Without aimin’ to toot
my horn none, I got a notion I can wrangle dudes to
a fare-ye-well. I’ll give it a try-out,
anyway. By the way, Major, have you seen Lingle?
How’s the case comin’?”
The Major’s face changed instantly
and he said with quite obvious sarcasm:
“He’s busier than a man
killin’ rattlesnakes, and he’s makin’
himself unpopular, I can tell you, tryin’ to
stir up somethin’.”
Teeters looked at him wonderingly
but said nothing; instead, he went out in search of
the deputy.
Lingle was sitting dejectedly on the
edge of the sidewalk when Teeters found him, and the
deputy returned his spicy greeting dispiritedly.
“You look bilious as a cat,”
said Teeters, eying him. “Why don’t
you take somethin’?”
“You bet I’m bilious-the
world looks plumb ja’ndiced!” the deputy
answered, with feeling.
“What’s the matter?”
Teeters sobered in sudden anxiety. “Ain’t
the case-
A frown grew between the deputy’s eyebrows.
“The case is gettin’ nowhere.
Things don’t look right, and I can’t exactly
put my finger on it.”
“What do you mean, Lingle?” quickly.
“I mean that people are actin’
curious-them sports inside-”
he jerked his thumb at the Boosters’ Club
behind him, “and the authorities.”
“How do you mean-curious?”
“Don’t show any interest-throw
a wet blanket over everything as if they wanted to
discourage me-I’m not sure that they’re
not tryin’ to block me.”
“But why would they?” Teeters looked incredulous.
Lingle shrugged a shoulder.
“I don’t know yet, but I’ve got
my own opinion.”
“But you won’t lay down,”
Teeters pleaded, “even if they pull against
you?”
“Not to notice!” the deputy replied grimly.