“Then there was a star danc’d,
and under that was I born.”
-Much
Ado About Nothing.
Cole Ralston rose up in a red windy
dawn; he cupped his hands to his mouth and called
out lustily: “Beds!”
All around, men roused up in the half
darkness and took up the word, laughing, as they dressed:
“Beds! Beds!”
The call meant that the wagon was
to be moved to-day; that each man was to roll bedding
and tarp to a hard and tight-roped cylinder, and was
then to carry it to a stack by the bed wagon.
The cook bent over pots and pans,
an active demon by a wind-blown fire; here already
the bobtail ate their private breakfast, that they
might depart in haste to relieve the last guard-now
slowly moving the herd from the bed ground, half a
mile away.
Cole moved over where Johnny Dines
was making up his bed roll.
“Needn’t hurry with that
bed, Johnny,” he said in an undertone. “You
move the wagon to Preisser Lake this mornin’.
Besides, you may want to hold something out of your
bed. You’re to slip away after dinner and
edge over towards Hillsboro. Help Hiram bring
his cattle back when he gets ready. Tell him
we’ll be round Aleman all this week, so he might
better come back through MacCleod’s Pass.
I don’t know within fifty mile where the John
Cross wagon is.”
Johnny nodded, abandoning his bed
making. “Bueno, senor!” He took
a pair of leather chaparejos from the bed, regarded
them doubtfully and threw them back.
“Guess I won’t take the
chaps. Don’t need them much except on the
river work, in the mesquite; and they’re so cussed,
all-fired hot.”
“Say, John, you won’t
need your mount, I reckon. Just take one horse.
Lot of our runaway horses in the John Cross pasture.
You can ride them-and take your pick for
your mount when you come back. That’s all.
Road from Upham goes straight west through the mountains.
Once you pass the summit you see your own country.”
“Got you,” said Johnny.
He went hotfoot to the wagon, grabbed
a tin washbasin, held it under the water-barrel faucet
and made a spluttering toilet-first man,
since he had not rolled his bed.
The bobtail rode off at a laughing
gallop. Daylight grew. The horse herd drew
near with a soft drumming of trotting feet in the sand.
Johnny rustled tools from the stacked tin plates and
cups; he stabbed a mighty beefsteak with his iron
fork; he added hot sour-dough biscuit, a big spoonful
of hot canned corn; he poured himself a cup of hot
black coffee, sat down on one of his own feet in the
sand, and became a busy man.
Others joined that business.
The last guard came in; the chattering circle round
the fire grew with surprising swiftness. Each,
as he finished, carried cup, plate and iron cutlery
to the huge dishpan by the chuck box, turned his night
horse loose, and strode off to the horse herd, making
a noose in his rope. They made a circle round
the big horse herd, a rope from each to each by way
of a corral on three sides of it; night wrangler and
day wrangler, mounted, holding down the fourth side.
Grumbling dayherders caught their horses, saddled
with miraculous swiftness and departed to take over
the herd. The bobtail was back before the roping
out of horses was completed. While the bobtail
roped out their horses, Johnny and the two wranglers
lured out the four big brown mules for the chuck wagon
and the two small brown mules for the bed wagon, tied
them to convenient soapweeds and hung a nose bag full
of corn on each willing brown head. Last of all
the horse wrangler caught his horse. The night
wrangler was to ride the bed wagon, so he needed no
horse.
The circle of men melted away from
about the horse herd; there was a swift saddling,
with occasional tumult of a bucking rebel; the horse
herd grazed quietly away; the wranglers went to breakfast;
even as they squatted cross-legged by the fire the
last horse was saddled, the Bar Cross outfit was off
to eastward to begin the day’s drive, half a
dozen horses pitching enthusiastically, cheered by
ironical encouragement and advice bestowed on their
riders. The sun would not be up for half an hour
yet. Forty men had dressed, rolled their beds,
eaten, roped out their day’s horses in the half
light from a dodging mob of four hundred head, saddled
and started. Fifty minutes had passed since the
first call of beds. The day herd was a mile away,
grazing down the long road to Preisser Lake; at the
chuck box the cook made a prodigious clatter of dish
washing.
The Bar Cross had shipped the north
drive of steers from Engle; the wagon had then wandered
southward for sixty miles to Fort Selden, there to
begin the south work in a series of long zigzags
across the broad plain. This was the morrow after
that day on which Charlie See had ridden to Garfield.
The wagon was halfway home to Engle
now; camped on the central run-off of the desert drainage
system, at the northmost of the chain of shallow wet-weather
lakes-known as Red Lakes-lying
east and south from Point of Rocks Hills. Elsewhere
these had been considerable hills; ten or fifteen
miles square of steepish sugar loaves, semi-independent,
with wide straits of grassy plain winding between;
but here, dumped down in the center of the plain, they
seemed pathetically insignificant and paltry against
the background of mighty hill, Timber Mountain black
in the west, San Andreas gleaming monstrous against
the rising sun.
Theoretically, the Jornada was fifty
miles wide here; in reality it was much wider; in
seeming it was twice as wide. From Red Lakes as
a center you looked up an interminable dazzle of slope
to the San Andreas, up and up over a broken bench
country to Timber Mountain, the black base of it high
above the level of Point o’ Rocks at its highest
summit; and toward the north looked up and up and up
again along a smoother and gentler slope ending in
a blank nothingness, against which the eye strained
vainly.
Johnny sipped another cup of coffee
with the wranglers; he smoked a cigarette; he put
on fresh clothing from his bed; he took his gun from
his bed and buckled the belt loosely at his waist.
His toilet completed, he rolled his bed. By this
time the wranglers had breakfasted.
They piled the bed rolls high on the
bed wagon and roped them tight for safe riding; they
harnessed and hitched the two small mules. The
night wrangler tied the reins to the dashboard and
climbed to the top of the stacked bedding.
“You see that these mules get
started, will you, Pat? I’m going to sleep.
They’ll tag along after the chuck wagon if you’ll
start ’em once,” said the night wrangler.
Discipline did not allow the night wrangler a name.
He stretched out luxuriously, his broad hat over his
face.
Johnny and Pat-Pat was
the horse wrangler-hitched the four mules
to the chuck wagon, after which Pat rounded up his
scattered charges and drove them down to the lake
for water.
All this time the red-head cook had
been stowing away his housekeeping, exactly three
times as fast as you would expect three men to do
it. A good cook, a clean cook, swiftest of all
cooks, Enriquez-also despot and holy terror
as a side line. Henry was the human hangnail.
It is a curious thing that all round-up cooks are
cranks; a fact which favors reflection. If it
be found that cooking and ferocity stand in the relation
of cause to effect, a new light is thrown on an old
question.
The last Dutch oven was stowed away,
the lid of the chuck box snapped shut and locked.
Johnny tossed the few remaining beds up to the cook.
“Do we fill the barrel here, Henry?”
“No. Dees water muddy.
Preisser Lake she am deep and clean. De company
ees buil’ a dam dere, yes. Han’ me
dees lines. You Mag! Jake! Rattle yo’
hocks!”
With creaking of harness and groaning
of axle, the chuck wagon led off on a grass-grown
road winding away to the northwest, a faint track
used only by the round-up; travel kept to the old Santa
Fe trail, to the west, beyond the railroad. Johnny
started the other team. Unguided, the bed wagon
jounced and bumped over grassy hummocks until it reached
the old road and turned in contentedly at the tail
of the chuck wagon. The sleeping wrangler mumbled,
rolled precariously on his high lurching bed, and
settled back to sleep.
Johnny laughed and rode ahead to help
Pat. They drove the horses in a wide detour round
the slow-grazing day herd. But the chuck wagon
held the right of way over everything; when it came
to pass the herd an hour or two later, it would be
for the herd to swerve aside.
The sun was high and hot now; Preisser
Hill, a thin long shadow, rose dim above the plain;
Upham tower and tank loomed high and spectral, ahead
and at the left.
“How do I get from Upham to
the river, Pat? I’m new to this country.”
“Wagon road due west to MacCleod’s Pass.”
“Can’t see any pass from here.”
“Naw. You slip into fold
between the hills, and twist round like a figure three.
Then you come to a big open park and MacCleod’s
Tank. Three draws run down from the park to the
river. ’Pache canyon, the biggest, runs
north to nowhere; Redgate, on the left, twists round
to Garfield. Wagon road goes down Redgate.
And Deadman Draw, in between, bears due west and heap
down, short and sweet. Riding?”
“Yep. Hillsboro. The middle draw will
be the one for me, then.”
By ten o’clock they watered
the horse herd at Preisser Lake; the wagons toiled
far behind. Half a mile away they picked the camp
site, with a little ridge for wind-break, soapweeds
to tie night horses to, wood handy, and a nearby valley
to be a bed ground for the herd; a valley wide, open,
free from brush, gully or dog holes.
They dragged up a great pile of mesquite
roots and built a fire; Pat went to watch his horses
and Johnny returned to the lake. Henry drove
the wagon into the lake, hub deep; Johnny stood on
the hub and dipped buckets of water, which he handed
up for the cook to pour into the barrel.
While these two filled the barrel
the grumbling night wrangler drove on to the fire;
when the slow chuck wagon trundled up, the night-hawk
had unharnessed his span of mules, spread his roll
in the cool shade under the bed wagon, and was already
asleep. The cook tossed down the odd beds, handed
down to Johnny certain pots, pans, ovens; he jumped
down-slap, snap, clatter, flash!-the
ovens were on the fire, the chuck box open, flour
in the bread pan; Henry was at his profession, mixing
bread on the table made by the open lid of the chuck
box, upheld by a hinged leg which fell into place
as the lid tilted down.
Johnny unharnessed; he unrolled a
tarp which wrapped a quarter of beef, and hung the
beef on the big brake; he filled the ten-gallon coffee
kettle and took it to the fire.
“Henry,” he said cautiously,
“can you let me have some cold bread and meat-enough
for night and morning? I’m for Hillsboro.
Goin’ to make a dry camp beyond the river somewhere.
Hillsboro’s too far and Garfield not far enough.
So I don’t want to stay at the settlements to-night.
I’ll lay out and stake my horse, I reckon.
Got to find the John Cross wagon to-morrow, and it’ll
take me all my time-so I don’t want
to wait for dinner.”
“Humph!” With a single
motion Henry flirted a shovelful of glowing coals
from the fire; a second motion twisted a small meat
oven into place over those coals. A big spoonful
of lard followed. “Rustle a can and boil
you some coffee. Open can tomatoes; pour ’em
in a plate. Use can. Ground coffee in box-top
shelf. I’ll have bread done for you when
coffee boils!”
While he spoke his hands were busy.
He dragged from the chuck box a dishpan full of steaks,
cut the night before. With a brisk slap he spread
a mighty steak on the chuck box lid, sprinkled it with
salt, swept it through the flour in his bread pan
with precisely the wrist-twisting motion of a man
stropping a razor, and spread the steak in the hissing
lard.
“Cook you another bimeby for
night,” he grunted, and emptied his sour-dough
sponge into the bread pan. A snappy cook, Henry;
on occasion he had built dinner for thirty men in
thirty minutes, by the watch, from the time the wagon
stopped-bread, coffee, steak and fried
potatoes-steak and potatoes made ready for
cooking the night before, of course. Henry had
not known he was being timed, either; he was that
kind of a cook.
Johnny gave thanks and ate; he rolled
a substantial lunch in a clean flour sack and tied
it in his slicker behind the saddle. He rode to
the horse herd; Pat rounded up the horses and Johnny
snared his Twilight horse for the trip. Twilight
was a grullo; that is to say, he was precisely
the color of a Maltese cat-a sleek velvet
slaty-blue; a graceful, half-wild creature, dainty
muzzled, clean legged as a deer. Pat held Twilight
by bit and bridle and made soothing statements to
him while Johnny saddled. Johnny slid into the
saddle, there was a brief hair-stirring session of
bucking; then Twilight sneezed cheerfully and set
off on a businesslike trot. Johnny waved good-by,
and turned across the gray plain toward Upham.
Looking back, he saw the van of the day herd just
showing up, a blur in the southeast.
Six miles brought him to Upham-side
track, section house, low station, windmill tower
and tank; there was a deep well here. He crossed
the old white scar of the Santa Fe trail, broad, deep
worn, little used and half forgotten. A new and
narrow road turned here at right angles to the old
trail and led ruler-straight to the west. Johnny
followed this climbing road, riding softly; bands of
cattle stirred uneasily and made off to left or right
in frantic run or shuffling trot. The road curved
once only, close to the hills, to round the head of
a rock-walled, deep, narrow gash, square and straight
and sheer, reaching away toward Rincon, paralleling
the course of the mountains. No soft water-washed
curves marked that grim gash; here the earth crust
had cracked and fallen apart; for twenty miles that
gray crack made an impassable barrier; between here
and the bare low hills was a No Man’s Land.
Midway of the twisting pass Johnny
came to a gate in a drift fence strung from bluff
to bluff; here was a frontier of the Bar Cross country.
He passed the outpost hills and came out to a rolling
open park, a big square corral of cedar pickets, an
earthen dam, a deep five-acre tank of water.
About this tank two or three hundred head of cattle
basked comfortably in the warm sun, most of them lying
down. They were gentle cattle; Johnny rode slowly
among them without stirring up excitement. “River
cattle-nester cattle,” said Johnny.
There were many brands, few of which he had seen before,
though he had heard of most of them.
A fresh bunch of cattle topped a riverward
ridge; the leaders raised their heads, snorted, turned
and fled; Twilight leaped in pursuit. “River
cattle-bosque cattle-outlaws!”
said Johnny. From the tail of his eye, as Twilight
thundered across the valley, Johnny was aware of a
deep gashed canyon heading in the north, of a notch
in the western rim of the saucer-shaped basin, and
a dark pass at the left. The cattle turned to
the left. Johnny closed in on them, taking down
his rope from the saddle horn. Twenty head-among
them one Bar Cross cow with an unbranded calf some
eight or ten months old. Johnny’s noose
whirled open, he drove the spurs home and plunged into
a whistling wind. He drew close, he made his
cast and missed it; Twilight swerved aside at the
very instant of the throw, the rope dragged at his
legs, he fell to frantic pitching. Johnny gathered
up the rope, massaged his refractory mount with it,
brought him to reason; in time to see a dust cloud
of cattle drop into the leftward pass. Twilight
flashed after. As they dived into the pass they
came to the wagon road again.
“This is Redgate,” thought Johnny.
They careened down the steep curves,
the cattle were just ahead; Twilight swooped upon
them, scattered the tailenders, drove ahead for the
Bar Cross cow and her long-ear. A low saddleback
pass appeared at the right, a winding trail led up
to an overhanging promontory under the pass; below,
the wagon road made a deep cut by the base of the
hill. Distrusting the cut road as the work of
man, the leaders took to the trail. Twilight
was at their heels; at the crown of the little promontory
Johnny threw again, and his rope circled the long-ear’s
neck. Johnny flipped the slack, the yearling crossed
it and fell crashing; Johnny leaped off and ran down
the rope, loosing the hogging string at his waist
as he ran; he gathered the yearling’s struggling
feet and hog-tied them. Twilight looked on, panting
but complacent.
“Look proud, now do, you ridiculous
old fool!” said Johnny. “Ain’t
you never goin’ to learn no sense a-tall?
You old skeezicks! You’ve lost a shoe,
too.”
He coiled his rope and tied it to
the saddle horn; from under the horn on the other
side he took a running iron, held there by a slitted
leather-an iron rod three-eighths of an
inch in diameter, a foot long and shaped like a shepherd’s
crook. He gathered up dead branches of mahogany
bush and made a small fire, cunningly built for a quick
draft, close beside the yearling; he thrust the hook
part of the branding iron into the hottest fire; and
while it was heating he returned to give grave reprimand
and instruction to Twilight. That culprit listened
attentively, bright-eyed and watchful; managing in
some way to bear himself so as to suggest a man who
looks over the top of his spectacles while rubbing
his chin with a thoughtful thumb. When the iron
was hot Johnny proceeded to put the Bar Cross brand
on the protesting yearling. Looking up, he became
aware of a man riding soberly down the canyon toward
him. Johnny waved his hand and shoved his iron
into the fire for a second heating.
The newcomer rode up the trail and
halted; a big red-headed man with a big square face
and twinkling eyes. He fished for tobacco and
rolled a cigarette.
“Thought I knew all the Bar
Cross waddies. You haven’t been wearin’
the crop and split very long, have you?”
“They just heard of me lately,” explained
Johnny.
“I know that Twilight horse
of yours. Saw him last spring at the round-up.
Purty as a picture, ain’t he?”
“Humph! Pretty is as pretty
does.” Johnny returned to his branding.
“He made me miss my throw, and now I’m
in the wrong canyon. I aimed to take the draw
north of here, for Hillsboro.”
The newcomer leaned on his saddle horn.
“Deadman? Well, you could
cross over through this pass if you was right set
on it. But it’s a mean place on the far
side-slick, smooth rock. You might
as well go on by way of Garfield now. You won’t
lose but a mile or two, and you’ll have fine
company-me. Or-say, if
you’re going that way, why can’t you mail
a letter for me? Then I won’t have to go
at all. I’d be much obliged to you if you
would. That was all I was going for, to mail
some location notices.”
“Sure I will. I kind of
want to see Garfield anyhow. Never been there.
Crop and split the right. So that’s done.
I’ll keep this piece of ear for tally.”
The other took a large envelope from
his saddle pockets and handed it over. Dines
stuck it in the bosom of his flannel shirt.
“I ain’t got no stamps.
This letter’ll need two, I guess. Here’s
the nickel. Will you please kindly stick ’em
on for me?”
“Sure,” said Dines again.
He undid the yearling’s legs. “Now,
young fellow, go find your mammy. Go a-snuffin’!”
The yearling scrambled to his feet,
bellowing. Johnny jerked him round by the tail
so that his nose pointed down the canyon; the newcomer
jumped his horse and shook a stirrup and slapped his
thigh with his hat; the yearling departed.
“Well, I’ll be getting
on back to camp,” said the newcomer. “So
long! Much obliged to you.”
“So long!” said Johnny.
He waved his hand. The other
waved answer as he took the trail. He jogged
in leisurely fashion up the canyon. Dines paused
to tread out the remaining fire, took up his branding
iron by the cool end, and rode whistling down the
canyon, swinging the iron to cool it before he slipped
it to its appointed place below his saddle horn.