The education of Honorable Patches
was begun without further delay. Because Phil’s
time was so fully occupied with his four-footed pupils,
the Dean himself became the stranger’s teacher,
and all sorts of odd jobs about the ranch, from cleaning
the pig pen to weeding the garden, were the text books.
The man balked at nothing. Indeed, he seemed to
find a curious, grim satisfaction in accomplishing
the most menial and disagreeable tasks; and when he
made mistakes, as he often did, he laughed at himself
with such bitter, mocking humor that the Dean wondered.
“He’s got me beat,”
the Dean confided to Stella. “There ain’t
nothin’ that he won’t tackle, an’
I’m satisfied that the man never did a stroke
of work before in his life. But he seems to be
always tryin’ experiments with himself, like
he expected himself to play the fool one way or another,
an’ wanted to see if he would, an’ then
when he don’t he’s as surprised and tickled
as a kid.”
The Dean himself was not at all above
assisting his new man in those experiments, and so
it happened that day when Patches had been set to
repairing the meadow pasture fence near the lower corrals.
The Dean, riding out that way to see
how his pupil was progressing, noticed a particularly
cross-tempered shorthorn bull that had wandered in
from the near-by range to water at the house corral.
But Phil and his helpers were in possession of the
premises near the watering trough, and his shorthorn
majesty was therefore even more than usual out of patience
with the whole world. The corrals were between
the bull and Patches, so that the animal had not noticed
the man, and the Dean, chuckling to himself, and without
attracting Patches’ attention, quietly drove
the ill-tempered beast into the enclosure and shut
the gate.
Then, riding around the corral, the
Dean called to the young man. When Patches stood
beside his employer, the cattleman said, “Here’s
a blamed old bull that don’t seem to be feelin’
very well. I got him into the corral all right,
but I’m so fat I can’t reach him from the
saddle. I wish you’d just halter him with
this rope, so I can lead him up to the house and let
Phil and the boys see what’s wrong with him.”
Patches took the rope and started
toward the corral gate. “Shall I put it
around his neck and make a hitch over his nose, like
you do a horse?” he asked, glad for the opportunity
to exhibit his newly acquired knowledge of ropes and
horses and things.
“No, just tie it around his
horns,” the Dean answered. “He’ll
come, all right.”
The bull, seeing a man on foot at
the entrance to his prison, rumbled a deep-voiced
threat, and pawed the earth with angry strength.
For an instant, Patches, with his
hand on the latch of the gate, paused to glance from
the dangerous-looking animal, that awaited his coming,
to the Dean who sat on his horse just outside the
fence. Then he slipped inside the corral and
closed the gate behind him. The bull gazed at
him a moment as if amazed at the audacity of this
mere human, then lowered his head for the charge.
“Climb that gate, quick,”
yelled the Dean at the critical moment.
And Patches climbed not a second too soon.
From his position of safety he smiled
cheerfully at the Dean. “He came all right,
didn’t he?”
The Dean’s full rounded front
and thick shoulders shook with laughter, while Senor
Bull dared the man on the gate to come down.
“You crazy fool,” said
the Dean admiringly, when he could speak. “Didn’t
you know any better than to go in there on foot?”
“But you said you wanted him,”
returned the chagrined Patches.
“What I wanted,” chuckled
the Dean, “was to see if you had nerve enough
to tackle him.”
“To tell the truth,” returned
Patches, with a happy laugh, “that’s exactly
what interested me.”
But, while the work assigned to Patches
during those first days of his stay on the Cross-Triangle
was chiefly those odd jobs which called for little
or no experience, his higher education was by no means
neglected. A wise and gentle old cow-horse was
assigned to him, and the Dean taught him the various
parts of his equipment, their proper use, and how to
care for them. And every day, sometimes in the
morning, sometimes late in the afternoon, the master
found some errand or business that would necessitate
his pupil riding with him. When Phil or Mrs. Baldwin
would inquire about the Dean’s kindergarten,
as they called it, the Dean would laugh with them,
but always he would say stoutly, “Just you wait.
He’ll be as near ready for the rodeo this fall
as them pupils in that kindergarten of Phil’s.
He takes to ridin’ like the good Lord had made
him specially for that particular job. He’s
just a natural-born horseman, or I don’t know
men. He’s got the sense, he’s got
the nerve, an’ he’s got the disposition.
He’s goin’ to make a top hand in a few
months, if” he always added with twinkling
eyes “he don’t get himself
killed tryin’ some fool experiment on himself.”
“I notice just the same that
he always has plenty of help in his experimentin’,”
Mrs. Baldwin would return dryly, which saying indicted
not only the Dean but Phil and every man on the Cross-Triangle,
including Little Billy.
Then came that day when Patches was
given a task that the Dean assured him is
one of the duties of even the oldest and best qualified
cowboys. Patches was assigned to the work of fenceriding. But when the Dean rode out with
his pupil early that morning to where the drift fence
begins at the corner of the big pasture, and explained
that “riding a fence” meant, in ranch
language, looking for breaks and repairing any such
when found, he did not explain the peculiarities of
that particular kind of fence.
“I told him to be sure and be
back by night,” he chuckled, as he explained
Patches’ absence at dinner to the other members
of the household.
“That was downright mean of
you, Will Baldwin,” chided Stella, with her
usual motherly interest in the comfort of her boys.
“You know the poor fellow will lose himself,
sure, out in that wild Tailholt Mountain country.”
The boys laughed.
“We’ll find him in the morning, all right,
mother,” reassured Phil.
“He can follow the fence back,
can’t he?” retorted the Dean. “Or,
as far as that goes, old Snip will bring him home.”
“If he knows enough to figger
it out, or to let Snip have his head,” said
Curly.
“At any rate,” the Dean
maintained, “he’ll learn somethin’
about the country, an’ he’ll learn somethin’
about fences, an’ mebby he’ll learn somethin’
about horses. An’ we’ll see whether
he can use his own head or not. There’s
nothin’ like givin’ a man a chance to find
out things for himself sometimes. Besides, think
what a chance he’ll have for some of his experiments!
I’ll bet a yearling steer that when we do see
him again, he’ll be tickled to death at himself
an’ wonderin’ how he had the nerve to
do it.”
“To do what?” asked Mrs. Baldwin.
“I don’t know what,”
chuckled the Dean; “but he’s bound to do
some fool thing or other just to see if he can, and
it’ll be somethin’ that nobody but him
would ever think of doin’, too.”
But Honorable Patches did not get
lost that day that is, not too badly lost.
There was a time, though but that does not
belong just here.
Patches was very well pleased with
the task assigned to him that morning. For the
first time he found himself trusted alone with a horse,
on a mission that would keep him the full day in the
saddle, and would take him beyond sight of the ranch
house. Very bravely he set out, equipped with
his cowboy regalia except the riata, which
the Dean, fearing experiments, had, at the last moment,
thoughtfully borrowed and armed with a
fencing tool and staples. He was armed, too, with
a brand-new “six-gun” in a spick and span
holster, on a shiny belt of bright cartridges.
The Dean had insisted on this, alleging that the embryo
cowboy might want it to kill a sick cow or something.
Patches wondered if he would know
a sick cow if he should meet one, or how he was to
diagnose the case to ascertain if she were sick enough
to kill.
The first thing he did, when the Dean
was safely out of sight, was to dismount and examine
his saddle girth. Always your real king of the
cattle range is careful for the foundation of his throne.
But there was no awkwardness, now, when he again swung
to his seat. The young man was in reality a natural
athlete. His work had already taken the soreness
and stiffness out of his unaccustomed muscles, and
he seemed, as the Dean had said, a born horseman.
And as he rode, he looked about over the surrounding
country with an expression on independence, freedom
and fearlessness very different from the manner of
the troubled man who had faced Phil Acton that night
on the Divide. It was as though the spirit of
the land was already working its magic within this
man, too. He patted the holster at his side,
felt the handle of the gun, lovingly fingered the
bright cartridges in his shiny belt, leaned sidewise
to look admiringly down at his fringed, leather chaps
and spur ornamented boot heels, and wished for his
riata not forgetting, meanwhile, to scan
the fence for places that might need his attention.
The guardian angel who cares for the
“tenderfoot” was good to Patches that
day, and favored him with many sagging wires and leaning
or broken posts, so that he could not ride far.
Being painstaking and conscientious in his work, he
had made not more than four miles by the beginning
of the afternoon. Then he found a break that would
occupy him for two hours at least. With rueful
eyes he surveyed the long stretch of dilapidated fence.
It was time, he reflected, that the Dean sent someone
to look after his property, and dismounting, he went
to work, forgetting, in his interest in the fencing
problem, to insure his horse’s near-by attendance.
Now, the best of cow-horses are not above taking advantage
of their opportunities. Perhaps Snip felt that
fenceriding with a tenderfoot was a little beneath
the dignity of his cattle-punching years. Perhaps
he reasoned that this man who was always doing such
strange things was purposely dismissing him. Perhaps
he was thinking of the long watering trough and the
rich meadow grass at home. Or, perhaps again,
the wise old Snip, feeling the responsibility of his
part in training the Dean’s pupil, merely thought
to give his inexperienced master a lesson. However
it happened, Patches looked up from his work some
time later to find himself alone. In consternation,
he stood looking about, striving to catch a glimpse
of the vanished Snip. Save a lone buzzard that
wheeled in curious circles above his head there was
no living thing in sight.
As fast as his heavy, leather chaps
and high-heeled, spur-ornamented boots would permit,
he ran to the top of a knoll a hundred yards or so
away. The wider range of country that came thus
within the circle of his vision was as empty as it
was silent. The buzzard wheeled nearer the
strange looking creature beneath it seemed so helpless
that there might be in the situation something of
vital interest to the tribe. Even buzzards must
be about their business.
There are few things more humiliating
to professional riders of the range than to be left
afoot; and while Patches was far too much a novice
to have acquired the peculiar and traditional tastes
and habits of the clan of which he had that morning
felt himself a member, he was, in this, the equal
of the best of them. He thought of himself walking
shamefaced into the presence of the Dean and reporting
the loss of the horse. The animal might be recovered,
he supposed, for he was still, Patches thought, inside
the pasture which that fence enclosed. Still
there was a chance that the runaway would escape through
some break and never be found. In any case the
vision of the grinning cowboys was not an attractive
one. But at least, thought the amateur cowboy,
he would finish the work entrusted to him. He
might lose a horse for the Dean, but the Dean’s
fence should be repaired. So he set to work with
a will, and, finishing that particular break, set
out on foot to follow the fence around the field and
so back to the lane that would lead him to the buildings
and corrals of the home ranch.
For an hour he trudged along, making
hard work of it in his chaps, boots, and spurs, stopping
now and then to drive a staple or brace a post.
The country was growing wilder and more broken, with
cedar timber on the ridges and here and there a pine.
Occasionally he could catch a glimpse of the black,
forbidding walls of Tailholt Mountain. But Patches
did not know that it was Tailholt. He only thought
that he knew in which direction the home ranch lay.
It seemed to him that it was a long, long way to the
corner of the field it must be a big pasture,
indeed. The afternoon was well on when he paused
on the summit of another ridge to rest. It, seemed
to him that he had never in all his life been quite
so warm. His legs ached. He was tired and
thirsty and hungry. It was so still that the
silence hurt, and that fence corner was nowhere in
sight. He could not, now reach home before dark,
even should he turn back; which, he decided grimly,
he would not do. He would ride that fence if
he camped three nights on the journey.
Suddenly he sprang to his feet, waving
his hat, hallooing and yelling like a madman.
Two horsemen were riding on the other side of the fence,
along the slope of the next ridge, at the edge of the
timber. In vain Patches strove to attract their
attention. If they heard him, they gave no sign,
and presently he saw them turn, ride in among the cedars,
and disappear. In desperation he ran along the
fence, down the hill, across the narrow little valley,
and up the ridge over which the riders had gone.
On the top of the ridge he stopped again, to spend
the last of his breath in another series of wild shouts.
But there was no answer. Nor could he be sure,
even, which way the horsemen had gone.
Dropping down in the shade of a cedar,
exhausted by his strenuous exertion, and wet with
honest perspiration, he struggled for breath and fanned
his hot face with his hat. Perhaps he even used
some of the cowboy words that he had heard Curly and
Bob employ when Little Billy was not around After
the noise of his frantic efforts, the silence was
more oppressive than ever. The Cross-Triangle
ranch house was, somewhere, endless miles away.
Then a faint sound in the narrow valley
below him caught his ear. Turning quickly, he
looked back the way he had come. Was he dreaming,
or was it all just a part of the magic of that wonderful
land? A young woman was riding toward him coming
at an easy swinging lope and, following,
at the end of a riata, was the cheerfully wise and
philosophic Snip.
Patches’ first thought when
he had sufficiently recovered I from his amazement
to think at all was that the woman rode
as he had never seen a woman ride before. Dressed
in the divided skirt of corduroy, the loose, soft,
gray shirt, gauntleted gloves, mannish felt hat, and
boots, usual to Arizona horsewomen, she seemed as
much at ease in the saddle as any cowboy in the land;
and, indeed, she was.
As she came up the slope, the man
in the shade of the cedar saw that she was young.
Her lithe, beautifully developed body yielded to the
movement of the spirited horse she rode with the unspoiled
grace of health and youth. Still nearer, and
he saw her clear cheeks glowing with the exercise
and excitement, her soft, brown hair under the wide
brim of the gray sombrero, and her dark eyes, shining
with the fun of her adventure. Then she saw him,
and smiled; and Patches remembered what the Dean had
said: “If there’s a man in Yavapai
County who wouldn’t ride the hoofs off the best
horse in his outfit to win a smile from Kitty Reid,
he ought to be lynched.”
As the man stood, hat in hand, she
checked her horse, and, in a voice that matched the
smile so full of fun and the clean joy of living greeted
him.
“You are Mr. Honorable Patches, are you not?”
Patches bowed. “Miss Reid, I believe?”
She frankly looked her surprise. “Why,
how did you know me?”
“Your good friend, Mr. Baldwin, described you,”
he smiled.
She colored and laughed to hide her
slight embarrassment. “The dear old Dean
is prejudiced, I fear.”
“Prejudiced he may be,”
Patches admitted, “but his judgement is unquestionable.
And,” he added gently, as her face grew grave
and her chin lifted slightly, “his confidence
in any man might be considered an endorsement, don’t
you think?”
“Indeed, yes,” she agreed
heartily, her slight coldness vanishing instantly.
“The Dean and Stella told me all about you this
afternoon, or I should not have ventured to introduce
myself. I am very pleased to meet you, Mr. Patches,”
she finished with a mock formality that was delightful.
“And I am delighted to meet
you, Miss Reid, for so many reasons that I can’t
begin to tell you of them,” he responded laughing.
“And now, may I ask what good magic brings you
like a fairy in the story book to the rescue of a
poor stranger in the hour of his despair? Where
did you find my faithless Snip? How did you know
where to find me? Where is the Cross-Triangle
Ranch? How many miles is it to the nearest water?
Is it possible for me to get home in time for supper?”
Looking down at him she laughed as only Kitty Reid
could laugh.
“You’re making fun of
me,” he charged; “they all do. And
I don’t blame them in the least; I have been
laughing at myself all day.”
“I’ll answer your last
question first,” she returned. “Yes,
you can easily reach the Cross-Triangle in time for
supper, if you start at once. I will explain
the magic as we ride.”
“You are going to show me the
way?” he cried eagerly, starting toward his
horse.
“I really think it would be best,” she
said demurely.
“Now I know you are a good fairy,
or a guardian angel, or something like that,”
he returned, setting his foot in the stirrup to mount.
Then suddenly he paused, with, “Wait a minute,
please. I nearly forgot.” And very
carefully he examined the saddle girth to see that
it was tight.
“If you had remembered to throw
your bridle rein over Snip’s head when you left
him, you wouldn’t have needed a guardian angel
this time,” she said.
He looked at her blankly over the patient Snip’s
back.
“And so that was what made him
go away? I knew I had done some silly thing that
I ought not. That’s the only thing about
myself that I am always perfectly sure of,”
he added as he mounted. “You see I can always
depend upon myself to make a fool of myself. It
was that bad place in the fence that did it.”
He pulled up his horse suddenly as they were starting.
“And that reminds me; there is one thing you
positively must tell me before I can go a foot, even
toward supper. How much farther is it to the
corner of this field?”
She looked at him in pretty amazement.
“To the corner of this field?”
“Yes, I knew, of course, that
if I followed the fence it was bound to lead me around
the field and so back to where I started. That’s
why I kept on; I thought I could finish the job and
get home, even if Snip did compel me to ride the fence
on foot.”
“But don’t you know that
this is a drift fence?” she asked, her eyes
dancing with fun.
“That’s what the Dean
called it,” he admitted. “But if it’s
drifting anywhere, it’s going end on. Perhaps
that’s why I couldn’t catch the corner.”
“But there is no corner to a drift fence,”
she cried.
“No corner?”
She shook her head as if not trusting herself to speak.
“And it doesn’t go around
anything there is no field?” Again
she shook her head.
“Just runs away out in the country somewhere
and stops?”
She nodded. “It must be eighteen or twenty
miles from here to the end.”
“Well, of all the silly fences!”
he exclaimed, looking away to the mountain peaks toward
which he had been so laboriously making his way.
“Honestly, now, do you think that is any way
for a respectable fence to act? And the Dean
told me to be sure and get home before dark!”
Then they laughed together laughed
until their horses must have wondered.
As they rode on, she explained the
purpose of the drift fence, and how it came to an
end so many miles away and so far from water that the
cattle do not usually find their way around it.
“And now the magic!” he
said. “You have made a most unreasonable,
unconventional and altogether foolish fence appear
reasonable, proper and perfectly sane. Please
explain your coming with Snip to my relief.”
“Which was also unreasonable,
unconventional and altogether foolish?” she
questioned.
“Which was altogether wonderful,
unexpected and delightful,” he retorted.
“It is all perfectly simple,”
she explained. “Being rather ”
She hesitated. “Well, rather sick of too
much of nothing at all, you know, I went over to the
Cross-Triangle right after dinner to visit a little
with Stella professionally.”
“Professionally?” he asked.
She nodded brightly. “For
the good of my soul. Stella’s a famous soul
doctor. The best ever except one, and she lives
far away away back east in Cleveland, Ohio.”
“Yes, I know her, too,” he said gravely.
And while they laughed at the absurdity
of his assertion, they did not know until long afterward
how literally true it was.
“Of course, I knew about you,”
she continued. “Phil told me how you tried
to ride that unbroken horse, the last time he was at
our house. Phil thinks you are quite a wonderful
man.”
“No doubt,” said Patches
mockingly. “I must have given a remarkable
exhibition on that occasion.” He was wondering
just how much Phil had told her.
“And so, you see,” she
continued, “I couldn’t very well help being
interested in the welfare of the stranger who had come
among us. Besides, our traditional western hospitality
demanded it; don’t you think?”
“Oh, certainly, certainly.
You could really do nothing less than inquire about
me,” he agreed politely.
“And so, you see, Stella quite
restored my soul health; or at least afforded me temporary
relief.”
He met the quizzing, teasing, laughing
look in her eyes blankly. “You are making
fun of me again,” he said humbly. “I
know I ought to laugh at myself, but
“Why, don’t you understand?”
she cried. “Dr. Stella administered a generous
dose of talk about the only new thing that has happened
in this neighborhood for months and months and months.”
“Meaning me?” he asked.
“Well, are you not?” she retorted.
“I guess I am,” he smiled. “Well,
and then what?”
“Why, then I came away, feeling much better,
of course.”
“Yes?”
“I was feeling so much better
I decided I would go home a roundabout way; perhaps
to the top of Black Hill; perhaps up Horse Wash, where
I might meet father, who would be on his way home
from Fair Oaks where he went this morning.”
“I see.”
“Well, so I met Snip, who was
on his way to the Cross-Triangle. I knew, of
course, that old Snip would be your horse.”
She smiled, as though to rob her words of any implied
criticism of his horsemanship.
“Exactly,” he agreed understandingly.
“And I was afraid that something
might have happened; though I couldn’t see how
that could be, either, with Snip. And so I caught
him
He interrupted eagerly. “How?”
“Why, with my riata,”
she returned, in a matter-of-fact tone, wondering
at his question.
“You caught my horse with your riata?”
he repeated slowly.
“And pray how should I have caught him?”
she asked.
“But but, didn’t he run?”
She laughed. “Of course
he ran. They all do that once they get away from
you. But Snip never could outrun my Midnight,”
she retorted.
He shook his head slowly, looking
at her with frank admiration, as though, for the first
time, he understood what a rare and wonderful creature
she was.
“And you can ride and rope like that?”
he said doubtfully.
She flushed hotly, and there was a
spark of fire in the brown eyes. “I suppose
you are thinking that I am coarse and mannish and all
that,” she said with spirit. “By
your standards, Mr. Patches, I should have ridden
back to the house, screaming, ladylike, for help.”
“No, no,” he protested.
“That’s not fair. I was thinking how
wonderful you are. Why, I would give what
wouldn’t I give to be able to do a thing like
that!”
There was no mistaking his earnestness,
and Kitty was all sunshine again, pardoning him with
a smile.
“You see,” she explained,
“I have always lived here, except my three years
at school. Father taught me to use a riata, as
he taught me to ride and shoot, because well because
it’s all a part of this life, and very useful
sometimes; just as it is useful to know about hotels
and time-tables and taxicabs, in that other part of
the world.”
“I understand,” he said
gently. “It was stupid of me to notice it.
I beg your pardon for interrupting the story of my
rescue. You had just roped Snip while he was
doing his best to outrun Midnight simple
and easy as calling a taxi ’Number
Two Thousand Euclid Avenue, please’ and
there you are.”
“Oh, do you know Cleveland?” she cried.
For an instant he was confused.
Then he said easily, “Everybody has heard of
the famous Euclid Avenue. But how did you guess
where Snip had left me?”
“Why, Stella had told me that
you were riding the drift fence,” she answered,
tactfully ignoring the evasion of her question.
“I just followed the fence. So there was
no magic about it at all, you see.”
“I’m not so sure about the magic,”
he returned slowly.
“This is such a wonderful country to
me that one can never be quite sure about
anything. At least, I can’t. But perhaps
that’s because I am such a new thing.”
“And do you like it?”
she asked, frankly curious about him.
“Like being a new thing?” he parried.
“Yes and No.”
“I mean do you like this wonderful country,
as you call it?”
“I admire the people who belong
to it tremendously,” he returned. “I
never met such men before or such women,”
he finished with a smile.
“But, do you like it?”
she persisted. “Do you like the life your
work would you be satisfied to live here
always?”
“Yes and No,” he answered again, hesitatingly.
“Oh, well,” she said,
with, he thought, a little bitterness and rebellion,
“it doesn’t really matter to you whether
you like it or not, because you are a man.
If you are not satisfied with your environment, you
can leave it go away somewhere else make
yourself a part of some other life.”
He shook his head, wondering a little
at her earnestness. “That does not always
follow. Can a man, just because he is a man, always
have or do just what he likes?”
“If he’s strong enough,”
she insisted. “But a woman must always do
what other people like.”
He was sure now that she was speaking rebelliously.
She continued, “Can’t
you, if you are not satisfied with this life here,
go away?”
“Yes, but not necessarily to
any life I might desire. Perhaps some sheriff
wants me. Perhaps I am an escaped convict.
Perhaps oh, a thousand things.”
She laughed aloud in spite of her
serious mood. “What nonsense!”
“But, why nonsense? What
do you and your friends know of me?”
“We know that you are not that
kind of a man,” she retorted warmly, “because” she
hesitated “well, because you are not
that sort of a man.”
“Are you sure you don’t
mean because I am not man enough to make myself wanted
very badly, even by the sheriff?” he asked, and
Kitty could not mistake the bitterness in his voice.
“Why, Mr. Patches!” she
cried. “How could you think I meant such
a thing? Forgive me! I was only wondering
foolishly what you, a man of education and culture,
could find in this rough life that would appeal to
you in any way. My curiosity is unpardonable,
I suppose, but you must know that we are all wondering
why you are here.”
“I do not blame you,”
he returned, with that self-mocking smile, as though
he were laughing at himself. “I told you
I could always be depended upon to make a fool of
myself. You see I am doing it now. I don’t
mind telling you this much that I am here
for the same reason that you went to visit Mrs. Baldwin
this afternoon.”
“For the good of your soul?” she asked
gently.
“Exactly,” he returned gravely. “For
the good of my soul.”
“Well, then, Mr. Honorable Patches,
here’s to your soul’s good health!”
she cried brightly, checking her horse and holding
out her hand. “We part here. You can
see the Cross-Triangle buildings yonder. I go
this way.”
He looked his pleasure, as he clasped
her hand in hearty understanding of the friendship
offered.
“Thank you, Miss Reid.
I still maintain that the Dean’s judgment is
unquestionable.”
She was not at all displeased with his reply.
“By the way,” she said,
as if to prove her friendship. “I suppose
you know what to expect from Uncle Will and the boys
when they learn of your little adventure?”
“I do,” he answered, as if resigned to
anything.
“And do you enjoy making fun for them?”
“I assure you, Miss Reid, I am very human.”
“Well, then, why don’t you turn the laugh
on them?”
“But how?”
“They are expecting you to get
into some sort of a scrape, don’t you think?”
“They are always expecting that.
And,” he added, with that droll touch in his
voice, “I must say I rarely disappoint them.”
“I suspect,” she continued,
thoughtfully, “that the Dean purposely did not
explain that drift fence to you.”
“He has established precedents
that would justify my thinking so, I’ll admit.”
“Well, then, why don’t
you ride cheerfully home and report the progress of
your work as though nothing had happened?”
“You mean that you won’t tell?”
he cried.
She nodded gaily. “I told
them this afternoon that it wasn’t fair for
you to have no one but Stella on your side.”
“What a good Samaritan you are!
You put me under an everlasting obligation to you.”
“All right,” she laughed.
“I’m glad you feel that way about it.
I shall hold that debt against you until some day
when I am in dreadful need, and then I shall demand
payment in full. Good-by!”
And once again Kitty had spoken, in
jest, words that held for them both, had they but
known, great significance.
Patches watched until she was out
of sight. Then he made his way happily to the
house to receive, with a guilty conscience but with
a light heart, congratulations and compliments upon
his safe return.
That evening Phil disappeared somewhere,
in the twilight. And a little later Jim Reid
rode into the Cross-Triangle dooryard.
The owner of the Pot-Hook-S was a
big man, tall and heavy, outspoken and somewhat gruff,
with a manner that to strangers often seemed near to
overbearing. When Patches was introduced, the
big cattleman looked him over suspiciously, spoke
a short word in response to Patches’ commonplace,
and abruptly turned his back to converse with the
better-known members of the household.
For an hour, perhaps, they chatted
about matters of general interest, as neighbors will;
then the caller arose to go, and the Dean walked with
him to his horse. When the two men were out of
hearing of the people on the porch Reid asked in a
low voice, “Noticed any stock that didn’t
look right lately, Will?”
“No. You see, we haven’t
been ridin’ scarcely any since the Fourth.
Phil and the boys have been busy with the horses every
day, an’ this new man don’t count, you
know.”
“Who is he, anyway?” asked Reid bluntly.
“I don’t know any more than that he says
his name is Patches.”
“Funny name,” grunted Jim.
“Yes, but there’s a lot
of funny names, Jim,” the Dean answered quietly.
“I don’t know as Patches is any funnier
than Skinner or Foote or Hogg, or a hundred other
names, when you come to think about it. We ain’t
just never happened to hear it before, that’s
all.”
“Where did you pick him up?”
“He just came along an’
wanted work. He’s green as they make ’em,
but willin’, an’ he’s got good sense,
too.”
“I’d go slow ‘bout takin’
strangers in,” said the big man bluntly.
“Shucks!” retorted the
Dean. “Some of the best men I ever had was
strangers when I hired ’em. Bein’
a stranger ain’t nothin’ against a man.
You and me would be strangers if we was to go many
miles from Williamson Valley. Patches is a good
man, I tell you. I’ll stand for him, all
right. Why, he’s been out all day, alone,
ridin’ the drift fence, just as good any old-timer.”
“The drift fence!”
“Yes, it’s in pretty bad shape in places.”
“Yes, an’ I ran onto a
calf over in Horse Wash, this afternoon, not four
hundred yards from the fence on the Tailholt side,
fresh-branded with the Tailholt iron, an’ I’ll
bet a thousand dollars it belongs to a Cross-Triangle
cow.”
“What makes you think it was mine?” asked
the Dean calmly.
“Because it looked mighty like
some of your Hereford stock, an’ because I came
on through the Horse Wash gate, an’ about a half
mile on this side, I found one of your cows that had
just lost her calf.”
“They know we’re busy an’ ain’t
ridin’ much, I reckon,” mused the Dean.
“If I was you, I’d put
some hand that I knew to ridin’ that drift fence,”
returned Jim significantly, as he mounted his horse
to go.
“You’re plumb wrong, Jim,”
returned the Dean earnestly. “Why, the man
don’t know a Cross-Triangle from a Five-Bar,
or a Pot-Hook-S.”
“It’s your business, Will;
I just thought I’d tell you,” growled Reid.
“Good-night!”
“Good-night, Jim! I’m
much obliged to you for ridin’ over.”