The affair at Cactus Springs had more
effect on the life at the Bar-20 than was realized
by the foreman. News travels rapidly, and certain
men, whose attributes were not of the sweetest, heard
of it and swore vengeance, for Slim Travennes had
many friends, and the result of his passing began
to show itself. Outlaws have as their strongest
defense the fear which they inspire, and little time
was lost in making reprisals, and these caused Buck
Peters to ride into Buckskin one bright October morning
and then out the other side of the town. Coming
to himself with a start he looked around shamefacedly
and retraced his course. He was very much troubled,
for, as foreman of the Bar-20, he had many responsibilities,
and when things ceased to go aright he was expected
not only to find the cause of the evil, but also the
remedy. That was what he was paid seventy dollars
a month for and that was what he had been endeavoring
to do. As yet, however, he had only accomplished
what the meanest cook’s assistant had done.
He knew the cause of his present woes to be rustlers
(cattle thieves), and that was all.
Riding down the wide, quiet street,
he stopped and dismounted before the ever-open door
of a ramshackle, one-story frame building. Tossing
the reins over the flattened ears of his vicious pinto
he strode into the building and leaned easily against
the bar, where he drummed with his fingers and sank
into a reverie.
A shining bald pate, bowed over an
open box, turned around and revealed a florid face,
set with two small, twinkling blue eyes, as the proprietor,
wiping his hands on his trousers, made his way to Buck’s
end of the bar.
“Mornin’, Buck. How’s things?”
The foreman, lost in his reverie, continued to stare
out the door.
“Mornin’,” repeated the man behind
the bar. “How’s things?”
“Oh!” ejaculated the foreman, smiling,
“purty cussed.”
“Anything flew?”
“Th’ C-80 lost another herd last night.”
His companion swore and placed a bottle
at the foreman’s elbow, but the latter shook
his head. “Not this mornin’ I’ll
try one of them vile cigars, however.”
“Them cigars are th’ very
best that ” began the proprietor,
executing the order.
“Oh, heck!” exclaimed
Buck with weary disgust. “Yu don’t
have to palaver none: I shore knows all that
by heart.”
“Them cigars ” repeated the
proprietor.
“Yas, yas; them cigars I
know all about them cigars. Yu gets them for
twenty dollars a thousand an’ hypnotizes us into
payin’ yu a hundred,” replied the foreman,
biting off the end ’of his weed. Then he
stared moodily and frowned. “I wonder why
it is?” He asked. “We punchers like
good stuff an’ we pays good prices with good
money. What do we get? Why, cabbage leaves
an’ leather for our smokin’ an’ alcohol
an’ extract for our drink. Now, up in Kansas
City we goes to a sumptious layout, pays less an’
gets bang-up stuff. If yu smelled one of them
K. C. cigars yu’d shore have to ask what it
was, an’ as for the liquor, why, yu’d think
St. Peter asked yu to have one with him. It’s
shore wrong somewhere.”
“They have more trade in K.
C.,” suggested the proprietor.
“An’ help, an’ taxes,
an’ a license, an’ rent, an’ brass,
cut glass, mahogany an’ French mirrors,”
countered the foreman.
“They have more trade,”
reiterated the man with the cigars.
“Forty men spend thirty dollars
apiece with yu every month.” The proprietor
busied himself under the bar. “Yu’ll
feel better to-morrow. Anyway, what do yu care,
yu won’t lose yore job,” he said, emerging.
Buck looked at him and frowned, holding
back the words which formed in anger. What was
the use, he thought, when every man judged the world
in his own way.
“Have yu seen any of th’ boys?”
He asked, smiling again.
“Nary a boy. Who do yu reckon’s doin’
all this rustlin’?”
“I’m reckonin’, not shoutin’,”
responded the foreman.
The proprietor looked out the window
and grinned: “Here comes one of yourn now.”
The newcomer stopped his horse in
a cloud of dust, playfully kicked the animal in the
ribs and entered, dusting the alkali from him with
a huge sombrero. Then he straightened up and
sniffed: “What’s burnin’?”
he asked, simulating alarm. Then he noticed the
cigar between the teeth of his foreman and grinned:
“Gee, but yore a brave man, Buck.”
“Hullo, Hopalong,” said
the foreman. “Want a smoke?” Waving
his hand toward the box on the bar.
Mr. Hopalong Cassidy side-stepped
and began to roll a cigarette: “Shore,
but I’ll burn my own I know what it
is.”
“What was yu doin’ to
my cayuse afore yu come in?” Asked Buck.
“Nothin’,” replied
the newcomer. “That was mine what I kicked
in th’ corrugations.”
“How is it yore ridin’
the calico?” Asked the foreman. “I
thought yu was dead stuck on that piebald.”
“That piebald’s a goat;
he’s beein livin’ off my pants lately,”
responded Hopalong. “Every time I looks
th’ other way he ambles over and takes a bite
at me. Yu just wait ’til this rustler business
is roped, an’ branded, an’ yu’ll
see me eddicate that blessed scrapheap into eatin’
grass again.” He swiped Billy’s shirt
th’ other day took it right off th’
corral wall, where Billy’s left it to dry.
Then, seeing Buck raise his eyebrows, he explained:
“Shore, he washed it again. That makes
three times since last fall.”
The proprietor laughed and pushed
out the ever-ready bottle, but Hopalong shoved it
aside and told the reason: “Ever since I
was up to K. C. I’ve been spoiled. I’m
drinkin’ water an’ slush.”
“For Pete’s sake, has
any more of yu fellers been up to K. C.?” queried
the proprietor in alarm.
“Shore: Red an’ Billy
was up there, too.” responded Hopalong.
“Red’s got a few remarks to shout to yu
about yore pain-killer. Yu better send for some
decent stuff afore he comes to town,” he warned.
Buck swung away from the bar and looked
at his dead cigar. Then he turned to Hopalong.
“What did you find?” He asked.
“Same old story: nice wide
trail up to th’ Staked Plain then
nothin’.”
“It shore beats me,” soliloquized
the foreman. “It shore beats me.”
“Think it was Tamale Jose’s old gang?”
Asked Hopalong.
“If it was they took th’ wrong trail home that
ain’t th’ way to Mexico.”
Hopalong tossed aside his half-smoked
cigarette. “Well, come on home; what’s
th’ use stewin’ over it? It’ll
come out all O.K. in th’ wash.” Then
he laughed: “There won’t be no piebald
waitin’ for it.”
Evading Buck’s playful blow
he led the way to the door, and soon they were a cloud
of dust on the plain. The proprietor, despairing
of customers under the circumstances, absent-mindedly
wiped oil on the bar, and sought his chair for a nap,
grumbling about the way his trade had fallen off,
for there were few customers, and those who did call
were heavy with loss of sleep, and with anxiety, and
only paused long enough to toss off their drink.
On the ranges there were occurrences which tried men’s
souls.
For several weeks cattle had been
disappearing from the ranges and the losses had long
since passed the magnitude of those suffered when Tamale
Jose and his men had crossed the Rio Grande and repeatedly
levied heavy toll on the sleek herds of the Pecos
Valley. Tamale Jose had raided once too often,
and prosperity and plenty had followed on the ranches
and the losses had been forgotten until the fall round-ups
clearly showed that rustlers were again at work.
Despite the ingenuity of the ranch
owners and the unceasing vigilance and night rides
of the cow-punchers, the losses steadily increased
until there was promised a shortage which would permit
no drive to the western terminals of the railroad
that year. For two weeks the banks of the Rio
Grande had been patrolled and sharp-eyed men searched
daily for trails leading southward, for it was not
strange to think that the old raiders were again at
work, notwithstanding the fact that they had paid dearly
for their former depredations.
The patrols failed to discover anything
out of the ordinary and the searchers found no trails.
Then it was that the owners and foremen of the four
central ranches met in Cowan’s saloon and sat
closeted together for all of one hot afternoon.
The conference resulted in riders
being dispatched from all the ranches represented,
and one of the couriers, Mr. Red Connors, rode north,
his destination being far-away Montana. All the
ranches within a radius of a hundred miles received
letters and blanks and one week later the Pecos Valley
Cattle-Thief Elimination Association was organized
and working, with Buck as Chief Ranger.
One of the outcomes of Buck’s
appointment was a sudden and marked immigration into
the affected territory. Mr. Connors returned from
Montana with Mr. Frenchy McAllister, the foreman of
the Tin-Cup, who was accompanied by six of his best
and most trusted men. Mr. McAllister and party
were followed by Mr. You-bet Somes, foreman of the
Two-X-Two of Arizona, and five of his punchers, and
later on the same day Mr. Pie Willis, accompanied
by Mr. Billy Jordan and his two brothers, arrived
from the Panhandle. The O-Bar-O, situated close
to the town of Muddy Wells, increased its payroll
by the addition of nine men, each of whom bore the
written recommendation of the foreman of the Bar-20.
The C-80, Double Arrow and the Three Triangle also
received heavy reinforcements, and even Carter, owner
of the Barred Horseshoe, far removed from the zone
of the depredations, increased his outfits by half
their regular strength.
Buck believed that if a thing was
worth doing at all that it was worth doing very well,
and his acquaintances were numerous and loyal.
The collection of individuals that responded to the
call were noteworthy examples of “gun-play”
and their aggregate value was at par with twice their
numbers in cavalry.
Each ranch had one large ranch-house
and numerous line-houses scattered along the boundaries.
These latter, while intended as camps for the outriders,
had been erected in the days, none too remote, when
Apaches, Arrapahoes, and even Cheyennes raided southward,
and they had been constructed with the idea of defense
paramount. Upon more than one occasion a solitary
line-rider had retreated within their adobe walls
and had successfully resisted all the cunning and ferocity
of a score of paint-bedaubed warriors and, when his
outfit had rescued him, emerged none the worse for
his ordeal.
On the Bar-20, Buck placed these houses
in condition to withstand seige. Twin barrels
of water stood in opposite corners, provisions were
stored on the hanging shelves and the bunks once again
reveled in untidiness. Spare rifles, in pattern
ranging from long-range Sharp’s and buffalo
guns to repeating rifles, leaned against the walls,
and unbroken boxes of cartridges were piled above
the bunks. Instead of the lonesome outrider,
he placed four men to each house, two of whom were
to remain at home and hold the house while their companions
rode side by side on their multi-mile beat.
There were six of these houses and,
instead of returning each night to the same line-house,
the outriders kept on and made the circuit, thus keeping
every one well informed and breaking the monotony.
These measures were expected to cause the rustling
operations to cease at once, but the effect was to
shift the losses to the Double Arrow, the line-houses
of which boasted only one puncher each. Unreasonable
economy usually defeats its object.
The Double Arrow was restricted on
the north by the Staked Plain, which in itself was
considered a superb defense. The White Sand Hills
formed its eastern boundary and were thought to be
second only to the northern protection. The only
reason that could be given for the hitherto comparative
immunity from the attacks of the rustlers was that
its cattle clung to the southern confines where there
were numerous springs, thus making imperative the
crossing of its territory to gain the herds.
It was in line-house N, most remote
of all, that Johnny Redmond fought his last fight
and was found face down in the half ruined house with
a hole in the back of his head, which proved that one
man was incapable of watching all the loop holes in
four walls at once. There must have been some
casualties on the other side, for Johnny was reputed
to be very painstaking in his “gunplay,”
and the empty shells which lay scattered on the floor
did not stand for as many ciphers, of that his foreman
was positive.
He was buried the day he was found,
and the news of his death ran quickly from ranch to
ranch and made more than one careless puncher arise
and pace the floor in anger. More men came to
the Double Arrow and its sentries were doubled.
The depredations continued, however, and one night
a week later Frank Swift reeled into the ranch-house
and fell exhausted across the supper table. Rolling
hoof-beats echoed flatly and died away on the plain,
but the men who pursued them returned empty handed.
The wounds of the unfortunate were roughly dressed
and in his delirium he recounted the fight. His
companion was found literally shot to pieces twenty
paces from the door. One wall was found blown
in, and this episode, when coupled with the use of
dynamite, was more than could be tolerated.
When Buck had been informed of this
he called to him Hopalong Cassidy, Red Connors and
Frenchy McAllister, and the next day the three men
rode north and the contingents of the ranches represented
in the Association were divided into two squads, one
of which was to remain at home and guard the ranches;
the other, to sleep fully dressed and armed and never
to stray far from their ranch-houses and horses.
These latter would be called upon to ride swiftly
and far when the word came.