THE MAN FROM CHERRYCOW
After lashing the desert to a frazzle
and finding the leaks in the Hotel Bender, the wind
from Papagueria went howling out over the mesa, still
big with rain for the Four Peaks country, and the sun
came out gloriously from behind the clouds. Already
the thirsty sands had sucked up the muddy pools of
water, and the board walk which extended the length
of the street, connecting saloon with saloon and ending
with the New York Store, smoked with the steam of drying.
Along the edge of the walk, drying out their boots
in the sun, the casual residents of the town many
of them held up there by the storm sat in
pairs and groups, talking or smoking in friendly silence.
A little apart from the rest, for such as he are a
long time making friends in Arizona, Rufus Hardy sat
leaning against a post, gazing gloomily out across
the desert. For a quiet, retiring young man, interested
in good literature and bearing malice toward no one,
his day in the Bender barroom had been eventful out
of all proportion to his deserts and wishes, and he
was deep in somber meditation when the door opened
and Judge Ware stepped out into the sunshine.
In outward appearance the judge looked
more like a large fresh-faced boy in glasses than
one of San Francisco’s eminent jurists, and the
similarity was enhanced by the troubled and deprecating
glances with which he regarded his foreman, who towered
above him like a mentor. There was a momentary
conference between them at the doorway, and then,
as Creede stumped away down the board walk, the judge
turned and reluctantly approached Hardy.
“I beg your pardon, sir,”
he began, as the young man in some confusion rose
to meet him, “but I should like a few words with
you, on a matter of business. I am Mr. Ware,
the owner of the Dos S Ranch perhaps
you may have heard of it over in the Four
Peaks country. Well I hardly know
how to begin but my foreman, Mr. Creede,
was highly impressed with your conduct a short time
ago in the er affray with the
barkeeper. I er really know
very little as to the rights of the matter, but you
showed a high degree of moral courage, I’m sure.
Would you mind telling me what your business is in
these parts, Mr. er ”
“Hardy,” supplied the
young man quietly, “Rufus Hardy. I am ”
“Er what?”
exclaimed the judge, hastily focussing his glasses.
“Hardy Hardy where have
I heard that name before?”
“I suppose from your daughter,
Miss Lucy,” replied the young man, smiling at
his confusion. “Unless,” he added
hastily, “she has forgotten about me.”
“Why, Rufus Hardy!” exclaimed
the judge, reaching out his hand. “Why,
bless my heart to be sure. Why, where
have you been for this last year and more? I
am sure your father has been quite worried about you.”
“Oh, I hope not,” answered
Hardy, shifting his gaze. “I guess he knows
I can take care of myself by this time if
I do write poetry,” he added, with a shade of
bitterness.
“Well, well,” said the
judge, diplomatically changing the subject, “Lucy
will be glad to hear of you, at any rate. I believe
she er wrote you once, some
time ago, at your Berkeley address, and the letter
was returned as uncalled for.”
He gazed over the rims of his glasses
inquiringly, and with a suggestion of asperity, but
the young man was unabashed.
“I hope you will tell Miss Lucy,”
he said deferentially, “that on account of my
unsettled life I have not ordered my mail forwarded
for some time.” He paused and for the moment
seemed to be considering some further explanation;
then his manner changed abruptly.
“I believe you mentioned a matter
of business,” he remarked bluffly, and the judge
came back to earth with a start. His mind had
wandered back a year or more to the mysterious disappearance
of this same self-contained young man from his father’s
house, not three blocks from his own comfortable home.
There had been a servant’s rumor that he had
sent back a letter or two postmarked “Bowie,
Arizona” but old Colonel Hardy had
said never a word.
“Er yes,” he
assented absently, “but well, I declare,”
he exclaimed helplessly, “I’ve quite forgotten
what it was about.”
“Won’t you sit down, then?”
suggested Hardy, indicating the edge of the board
walk with a courtly sweep of the hand. “This
rain will make good feed for you up around the Four
Peaks I believe it was of your ranch there
that you wished to speak.”
Judge Ware settled down against a
convenient post and caught his breath, meanwhile regarding
his companion curiously.
“Yes, that’s it,”
he said. “I wanted to talk with you about
my ranch, but I swear I’ll have to wait till
Creede comes back, now.”
“Very well,” answered
Hardy easily; “we can talk about home, then.
How is Miss Lucy succeeding with her art is
she still working at the Institute?”
“Yes, indeed!” exclaimed
the judge, quite mollified by the inquiry. “Indeed
she is, and doing as well as any of them. She
had a landscape hung at the last exhibit, that was
very highly praised, even by Mathers, and you know
how hard he is to please. Tupper Browne won the
prize, but I think Lucy’s was twice the picture kind
of soft and sunshiny, you know it made
you think of home, just to look at it.”
“Well, I’m glad to hear
that,” said Hardy, looking up the ragged street
a little wistfully. “I kind of lose track
of things down here, knocking around from place to
place.” He seated himself wearily on the
edge of the sidewalk and drummed with his sinewy white
hands against a boot leg. “But it’s
a great life, sure,” he observed, half to himself.
“And by the way, Mr. Ware,” he continued,
“if it’s all the same to you I wish you
wouldn’t say anything to your foreman about my
past life. Not that there is anything disgraceful
about it, but there isn’t much demand for college
graduates in this country, you know, and I might want
to strike him for a job.”
Judge Ware nodded, a little distantly;
he did not approve of this careless young man in all
his moods. For a man of good family he was hardly
presentable, for one thing, and he spoke at times like
an ordinary working man. So he awaited the lumbering
approach of his foreman in sulky silence, resolved
to leave the matter entirely in his hands.
Jefferson Creede bore down upon them
slowly, sizing up the situation as he came, or trying
to, for everything seemed to be at a standstill.
“Well?” he remarked, looking
inquiringly from the judge to Hardy. “How
about it?”
There was something big and dominating
about him as he loomed above them, and the judge’s
schoolboy state of mind instantly returned.
“I I really haven’t
done anything about the matter, Jefferson,” he
stammered apologetically. “Perhaps you will
explain our circumstances to Mr. Hardy here, so that
we can discuss the matter intelligently.”
He looked away as he spoke, and the tall foreman grunted
audibly.
“Well,” he drawled, “they
ain’t much to explain. The sheepmen have
been gittin’ so free up on our range that I’ve
had a little trouble with ’em and
if I was the boss they’d be more trouble, you
can bet your life on that. But the judge here
seems to think we can kinder suck the hind teat and
baby things along until they git that Forest Reserve
act through, and make our winnin’ later.
He wants to make friends with these sheepmen and git
’em to kinder go around a little and give us
half a chanst. Well, maybe it can be done but
not by me. So I told him either to get a superintendent
to handle the sheep end of it or rustle up a new foreman,
because I see red every time I hear a sheep-blat.
“Then come the question,”
continued the cowman, throwing out his broad hand
as if indicating the kernel of the matter, “of
gittin’ such a man, and while we was
talkin’ it over you called old Tex down so good
and proper that there wasn’t any doubt in my
mind providin’ you want the job,
of course.”
He paused and fixed his compelling
eyes upon Hardy with such a mixture of admiration
and good humor that the young man was won over at once,
although he made no outward sign. It was Judge
Ware who was to pass upon the matter finally, and
he waited deferentially for him to speak.
“Well er Jefferson,”
began the judge a little weakly, “do you think
that Mr. Hardy possesses the other qualities which
would be called for in such a man?”
“W’y, sure,” responded
Creede, waving the matter aside impatiently.
“Go ahead and hire him before he changes his
mind.”
“Very well then, Mr. Hardy,”
said the judge resignedly, “the first requisite
in such a man is that he shall please Mr. Creede.
And since he commends you so warmly I hope that you
will accept the position. Let me see um would
seventy-five dollars a month seem a reasonable figure?
Well, call it seventy-five, then that’s
what I pay Mr. Creede, and I want you to be upon an
equality in such matters.
“Now as to your duties.
Jefferson will have charge of the cattle, as usual;
and I want you, Mr. Hardy, to devote your time and
attention to this matter of the sheep. Our ranch
house at Hidden Water lies almost directly across
the river from one of the principal sheep crossings,
and a little hospitality shown to the shepherds in
passing might be like bread cast upon the waters which
comes back an hundred fold after many days. We
cannot hope to get rid of them entirely, but if the
sheep owners would kindly respect our rights to the
upper range, which Mr. Creede will point out to you,
I am sure we should take it very kindly. Now
that is your whole problem, Rufus, and I leave the
details entirely in your hands. But whatever
you do, be friendly and see if you can’t appeal
to their better nature.”
He delivered these last instructions
seriously and they were so taken by Hardy, but Creede
laughed silently, showing all his white teeth, yet
without attracting the unfavorable attention of the
judge, who was a little purblind. Then there
was a brief discussion of details, an introduction
to Mr. Einstein of the New York Store, where Hardy
was given carte blanche for supplies, and Judge
Ware swung up on the west-bound limited and went flying
away toward home, leaving his neighbor’s son now
his own superintendent and sheep expert standing
composedly upon the platform.
“Well,” remarked Creede,
smiling genially as he turned back to the hotel, “the
Old Man’s all right, eh, if he does have fits!
He’s good-hearted and that goes a
long ways in this country but actually,
I believe he knows less about the cattle business than
any man in Arizona. He can’t tell a steer
from a stag honest! And I can lose
him a half-mile from camp any day.”
The tall cattleman clumped along in
silence for a while, smiling over some untold weakness
of his boss then he looked down upon Hardy
and chuckled to himself.
“I’m glad you’re
going to be along this trip,” he said confidentially.
“Of course I’m lonely as a lost dog out
there, but that ain’t it; the fact is, I need
somebody to watch me. W’y, boy, I could
beat the old judge out of a thousand dollars’
worth of cattle and he’d never know it in a
lifetime. Did ye ever live all alone out on a
ranch for a month or so? Well, you know how lawless
and pisen-mean a man can git, then, associatin’
with himself. I’d’ve had the old man
robbed forty times over if he wasn’t such a
good-hearted old boy, but between fightin’ sheepmen
and keepin’ tab on a passel of brand experts
up on the Tonto I’m gittin’ so ornery
I don’t dare trust myself. Have a smoke?
Oh, I forgot ”
He laughed awkwardly and rolled a cigarette.
“Got a match?” he demanded
austerely. “Um, much obliged be
kinder handy to have you along now.” He
knit his brows fiercely as he fired up, regarding
Hardy with a furtive grin.
“Say,” he said abruptly,
“I’ve got to make friends with you some
way. You eat, don’t you? All
right then, you come along with me over to the Chink’s.
I’m going to treat you to somethin’, if
it’s only ham ‘n’ eggs.”
They dined largely at Charley’s
and then drifted out to the feed corral. Creede
threw down some hay to a ponderous iron-scarred roan,
more like a war horse than a cow pony, and when he
came back he found Hardy doing as much for a clean-limbed
sorrel, over by the gate.
“Yourn?” he inquired,
surveying it with the keen concentrated gaze which
stamps every point on a cowboy’s memory for life.
“Sure,” returned Hardy,
patting his pony carefully upon the shoulder.
“Kinder high-headed, ain’t
he?” ventured Creede, as the sorrel rolled his
eyes and snorted.
“That’s right,”
assented Hardy, “he’s only been broke about
a month. I got him over in the Sulphur Springs
Valley.”
“I knowed it,” said the
cowboy sagely, “one of them wire-grass horses an’
I bet he can travel, too. Did you ride him all
the way here?”
“Clean from the Chiricahuas,”
replied the young man, and Jefferson Creede looked
up, startled.
“What did you say you was doin’
over there?” he inquired slowly, and Hardy smiled
quietly as he answered:
“Riding for the Cherrycow outfit.”
“The hell you say!” exclaimed
Creede explosively, and for a long time he stood silent,
smoking as if in deep meditation.
“Well,” he said at last,
“I might as well say it I took you
for a tenderfoot.”