Shortly after noon, Hopalong, who
had ridden with his head bowed low in meditation,
looked up and slapped his thigh. Then he looked
at Red and grinned.
“Look ahere, Red,” he
began, “there ain’t no rustlers with their
headquarters on this God-forsaken sand heap, an’
there never was. They have to have water an’
lots of it, too, an’ th’ nearest of any
account is th’ Pecos, or some of them streams
over in th’ Panhandle. Th’ Panhandle
is th’ best place. There are lots of streams
an’ lakes over there an’ they’re
right in a good grass country. Why, an’
army could hide over there an’ never be found
unless it was hunted for blamed good. Then, again,
it’s close to the railroad. Up north aways
is th’ south branch of th’ Santa Fe Trail
an’ it’s far enough away not to bother
anybody in th’ middle Panhandle. Then there’s
Fort Worth purty near, an’ other trails.
Didn’t Buck say he had all th’ rest of
th’ country searched? He meant th’
Pecos Valley an th’ Davis Mountains country.
All th’ rustlers would have to do if they were
in th’ Panhandle would be to cross th’
Canadian an th’ Cimarron an’ hit th’
trail for th’ railroad. Good fords, good
grass an’ water all th’ way, cattle fat
when they are delivered an plenty of room. Th’
more I thinks about it th’ more I cottons to
the Panhandle.”
“Well, it shore does sound good,”
replied Red, reflectively.
“Do yu mean th’ Cunningham Lake region
or farther north?”
“Just th’ other side of
this blasted desert: anywhere where there’s
water,” responded Hopalong, enthusiastically.
“I’ve been doin’ some hot reckonin’
for th’ last two hours an’ this is th’
way it looks to me: they drives th’ cows
up on this skillet for a ways, then turns east an’
hits th’ trail for home an’ water.
They can get around th’ ca on near Thatcher’s
Lake by a swing of th’ north. I tell yu
that’s th’ only way out’n this.
Who could tell where they turned with th’ wind
raisin’ th’ deuce with the trail?
Didn’t we follow a trail for a ways, an’
then what? Why, there wasn’t none to follow.
We can ride north ’till we walk behind ourselves
an’ never get a peek at them. I am in favor
of headin’ for th’ Sulphur Spring Creek
district. We can spend a couple of weeks, if
we has to, an’ prospect that whole region without
havin’ to cut our’ water down to a smell
an’ a taste an live on jerked beef. If we
investigates that country we’ll find something
else than sand storms, poisoned water holes an’
blisters.”
“Ain’t th’ Panhandle
full of nesters (farmers)?” Inquired Red, doubtfully.
“Along th’ Canadian an’
th’ edges, yas; in th’ middle, no,”
explained Hopalong. “They hang close together
on account of th’ war-whoops, an’ they
like th’ trails purty well because of there allus
bein’ somebody passin’.”
“Buck ought to send some of
th’ Panhandle boys up there,” suggested
Red. “There’s Pie Willis an’
th’ Jordans they knows th’
Panhandle like yu knows poker.”
Frenchy had paid no apparent attention
to the conversation up to this point, but now he declared
himself. “Yu heard what Buck said, didn’t
yu?” He asked. “We were told to search
th’ Staked Plains from one end to th’
other an’ I’m goin’ to do it if I
can hold out long enough. I ain’t goin’
to palaver with yu because what yu say can’t
be denied as far as wisdom is concerned. Yu may
have hit it plumb center, but I knows what I was ordered
to do, an’ yu can’t get me to go over there
if you shouts all night. When Buck says anything,
she goes. He wants to know where th’ cards
are stacked an’ why he can’t holler ‘Keno,’
an’ I’m goin’ to find out if I can.
Yu can go to Patagonia if yu wants to, but yu go alone
as far as I am concerned.”
“Well, it’s better if
yu don’t go with us,” replied Hopalong,
taking it for granted that Red would accompany him.
“Yu can prospect this end of th’ game
an’ we’ll be takin’ care of th’
other. It’s two chances now where we only
had one afore.”
“Yu go east an’ I’ll
hunt around as ordered,” responded Frenchy.
“East nothin’,”
replied Hopalong. “Yu don’t get me
to wallow in hot alkali an’ lose time ridin’
in ankle-deep sand when I can hit th’ south
trail, skirt th’ White Sand Hills an’ be
in God’s country again. I ain’t goin’
to wrastle with no ca on this here trip, none
whatever. I’m goin’ to travel in
style, get to Big Spring by ridin’ two miles
to where I could only make one on this stove.
Then I’ll head north along Sulpher Spring Creek
an’ have water an’ grass all th’
way, barrin’ a few stretches. While you
are bein’ fricasseed I’ll be streakin’
through cottonwood groves an’ ridin’ in
the creek.”
“Yu’ll have to go alone,
then,” said Red, resolutely. “Frenchy
ain’t a-goin’ to die of lonesomeness on
this desert if I knows what I’m about, an’
I reckon I do, some. Me an’ him’ll
follow out what Buck said, hunt around for a while
an’ then Frenchy can go back to th’ ranch
to tell Buck what’s up an’ I’ll
take th’ trail yu are a-scared of an’ meet
yu at th’ east end of Cunningham Lake three
days from now.”
“Yu better come with me,”
coaxed Hopalong, not liking what his friend had said
about being afraid of the trail past the ca on
and wishing to have some one with whom to talk on
his trip. “I’m goin’ to have
a nice long swim to-morrow night,” he added,
trying bribery.
“An’ I’m goin’
to try to keep from hittin’ my blisters,”
responded Red. “I don’t want to go
swimmin’ in no creek full of moccasins I’d
rather sleep with rattlers or copperheads. Every
time I sees a cotton-mouth I feels like I had just
sit down on one.
“I’ll flip a coin to see
whether yu comes or not,” proposed Hopalong.
“If yu wants to gamble so bad
I’ll flip yu to see who draws our pay next month,
but not for what you said,” responded Red, choking
down the desire to try his luck.
Hopalong grinned and turned toward
the south. “If I sees Buck afore yu do,
I’ll tell him yu an’ Frenchy are growin’
watermelons up near Last Stand Rock an’ are
waitin’ for rain. Well, so long,”
he said.
“Yu tell Buck we’re obeyin’
orders!” shouted Red, sorry that he was not
going with his bunkie.
Frenchy and Red rode on in silence,
the latter feeling strangely lonesome, for he and
the departed man had seldom been separated when journeys
like this were to be taken. And when in search
of pleasure they were nearly always together.
Frenchy, while being very friendly with Hopalong,
a friendship that would have placed them side by side
against any odds, was not accustomed to his company
and did not notice his absence.
Red looked off toward the south for
the tenth time and for the tenth time thought that
his friend might return. “He’s a son-of-a-gun,”
he soliloquized.
His companion looked up: “He
shore is, an’ he’s right about this rustler
business, too. But we’ll look around for
a day or so an’ then yu raise dust for th’
Lake. I’ll go back to th’ ranch an’
get things primed, so there’ll be no time lost
when we get th’ word.”
“I’m sorry I went an’
said what I did about me takin’ th’ trail
he was a-scared of,” confessed Red, after a
pause. “Why, he ain’t a-scared of
nothin’.”
“He got back at yu about them
watermelons, so what’s th’ difference?”
Asked Frenchy. “He don’t owe yu nothin’.”
An hour later they searched the Devil’s
Rocks, but found no rustlers. Filling their canteens
at a tiny spring and allowing their mounts to drink
the remainder of the water, they turned toward Hell
Arroyo, which they reached at nightfall. Here,
also, their search availed them nothing and they paused
in indecision. Then Frenchy turned toward his
companion and advised him to ride toward the Lake
in the night when it was comparatively cool.
Red considered and then decided that
the advice was good. He rolled a cigarette, wheeled
and faced the east and spurred forward: “So
long,” he called.
“So long,” replied Frenchy,
who turned toward the south and departed for the ranch.
The foreman of the Bar-20 was cleaning
his rifle when he heard the hoof-beats of a galloping
horse and he ran around the corner of the house to
meet the newcomer, whom he thought to be a courier
from the Double Arrow. Frenchy dismounted and
explained why he returned alone.
Buck listened to the report and then,
noting the fire which gleamed in his friend’s
eyes, nodded his approval to the course. “I
reckon it’s Trendley, Frenchy I’ve
heard a few things since yu left. An’ yu
can bet that if Hopalong an’ Red have gone for
him he’ll be found. I expect action any
time now, so we’ll light th’ signal fire.”
Then he hesitated; “Yu light it yu’ve
been waiting a long time for this.”
The balls of smoke which rolled upward
were replied to by other balls at different points
on the plain, and the Bar-20 prepared to feed the
numbers of hungry punchers who would arrive within
the next twenty-four hours.
Two hours had not passed when eleven
men rode up from the Three Triangle, followed eight
hours later by ten from the O-Bar-O. The outfits
of the Star Circle and the Barred Horseshoe, eighteen
in all, came next and had scarcely dismounted when
those of the C-80 and the Double Arrow, fretting at
the delay, rode up. With the sixteen from the
Bar-20 the force numbered seventy-five resolute and
pugnacious cowpunchers, all aching to wipe out the
indignities suffered.