THE COMING OF THE SHEEP
From his seat on the top of a high
ridge, Gordon Wade looked into the bowl-shaped valley
beneath him, with an expression of amazement on his
sun-burned face. Pouring through a narrow opening
in the environing hills, and immediately spreading
fan-like over the grass of the valley, were sheep;
hundreds, thousands of them. Even where he sat,
a good quarter mile above them, the air was rank with
the peculiar smell of the animals he detested, and
their ceaseless “Ba-a-a, ba-a-a, ba-a-a,”
sounded like the roar of surf on a distant coast.
Driven frantic by the appetizing smell of the sweet
bunch-grass, the like of which they had not seen in
months, the sheep poured through the gap like a torrent
of dirty, yellow water; urged on from the rear and
sides by barking dogs and shouting herders.
Straightening his six feet of bone
and muscle, the cattleman stood up and stepped to
the extreme edge of the rim-rock, with hardened countenance
and gleaming eyes. A herder saw him standing there,
in open silhouette against the sky line, and with
many wild gesticulations pointed him out to his companions.
With a quick motion, Wade half raised his rifle from
the crook of his arm toward his shoulder, and then
snorted grimly as the herders scrambled for shelter.
“Coyotes!” he muttered, reflecting that
constant association with the beasts that such men
tended, seemed to make cowards of them all.
With an ominous shake of his head,
he went back on the ridge to his waiting horse, eager
to bear word of the invasion to Santry, his ranch
foreman and closest friend. Thrusting the short-barreled
rifle into its scabbard beneath the stirrup leather,
he mounted and rode rapidly away.
Dusk was gathering as he pushed his
way through the willows which fringed Piah Creek and
came out into the clearing which held his ranch buildings.
Nestling against the foot of a high bluff with the
clear waters of the creek sparkling a scant fifty
yards from the door, the log ranch house remained
hidden until one was almost upon it. To the left,
at the foot of a long slope, the corrals and out-buildings
were situated, while beyond them a range of snow-capped
mountains rose in majestic grandeur. Back of
the house, at the top of the bluff, a broad tableland
extended for miles; this, with Crawling Water Valley,
comprising the fine range land, on which fattened three
thousand head of cattle, carrying the Wade brand,
the Double Arrow. Barely an hour before, the
owner had surveyed the scene with more than satisfaction,
exulting in the promise of prosperity it seemed to
convey. Now all his business future was threatened
by the coming of the sheep.
After putting his horse in the corral,
the ranch owner turned toward the house. As he
walked slowly up the hill, he made a fine figure of
a man; tall, straight, and bronzed like an Indian.
His countenance in repose was frank and cheerful,
and he walked with the free, swinging stride of an
out-door man in full enjoyment of bodily health and
vigor. Entering the cabin by the open door, he
passed through to the rear where a rattling of pots
and pans and an appetizing smell of frying bacon told
that supper was in progress.
Bill Santry was standing by the stove,
turning the bacon in its sizzling grease, with a knack
which told of much experience in camp cookery.
The face which the lean and grizzled plainsman turned
toward his friend was seamed by a thousand tiny wrinkles
in the leathery skin, the result of years of exposure
to all kinds of weather.
“Hello, Gordon!” he exclaimed.
His pale blue eyes showed like pin points under the
shaggy, gray brows. “You’re back early,
just in time for me to remark that if we don’t
get a pot-wrastler for this here outfit pretty durn
quick, the boys’ll be cookin’ their own
chuck. I’m blamed if I’ll herd this
stove much longer.”
Wade smiled as he passed into the
adjoining room to remove his spurs and chaps.
“There’s a Chinese coming up from town
to-morrow,” he said.
Santry peered across the stove to
watch him as he moved about his room. The week
before, a large picture of an extremely beautiful girl,
which she had sent to Wade and which at first he had
seemed to consider his most precious ornament, had
fallen face downward on the table. Santry was
curious to see how long it would be before Wade would
set it up again, and he chuckled to himself when he
saw that no move was made to do so. Wade had
presented Santry to the girl some months before, when
the two men were on a cattle-selling trip to Chicago,
and the old plainsman had not cared for her, although
he had recognized her beauty and knew that she was
wealthy in her own right, and moreover was the only
child of a famous United States Senator.
“There’s thunder to pay
over in the valley, Bill.” Wade had produced
“makings,” and rolled himself a cigarette
as he watched the foreman cooking. “Sheep thousands
of them are coming in.”
“What?” Santry straightened
up with a jerk which nearly capsized the frying pan.
“Sheep? On our range? You ain’t
kiddin’ me?”
“Nope. Wish I was, but
it’s a fact. The sheep are feeding on the
grass that we hoped to save against the winter.
It’s the Jensen outfit, I could make that out
from where I stood.”
“Hell!” Stamping angrily
across the floor, Santry gazed out into the twilight.
“That dirty, low-lived Swede? But we’ll
fix him, boy. I know his breed, the skunk!
I’ll....” The veins in the old plainsman’s
throat stood out and the pupils of his eyes contracted.
“I’ll run his blamed outfit out of the
valley before noon termorrer. I’ll make
Jensen wish....”
“Steady, Bill!” Wade interposed,
before the other could voice the threat. “Violence
may come later on perhaps; but right now we must try
to avoid a fight.”
“But by the great horned toad...!”
Santry stretched out his powerful
hands and slowly clenched his fingers. He was
thinking of the pleasure it would give him to fasten
them on Jensen.
“The thing puzzles me,”
Wade went on, flecking his cigarette through the window.
“Jensen would never dare to come in here on his
own initiative. He knows that we cowmen have
controlled this valley for years, and he’s no
fighter. There’s lots of good grass on the
other side of the mountains, and he knows that as
well as we do. Why does he take chances, then,
on losing his stock, and maybe some of his herders
by butting in here?”
“That’s what I want to
know,” Santry immediately agreed, as though the
thought were his own. “Answer me that!
By the great horned toad! If I had my way....”
“This country isn’t what
it was ten years ago, Bill. We’re supposed
to have courts here now, you know.” Santry
sighed heavily. “To-morrow,” Wade
continued, “I’ll ride over and have a talk
with whoever’s in charge of the outfit.
Maybe I can learn something. You stay here and
keep Kelly and the rest quiet if they get wind of
what’s going on and seem inclined to show fight.
I’ve been, in a way, looking for trouble ever
since we refused to let that fellow, Moran, get a
foothold in the valley. If he’s back of
this, we’ve got a clever man to fight.”
“There’s another hombre
I’d like awful well to get my hands on to,”
declared Santry belligerently. “Damned oily,
greedy land shark! All right, all right!
Needn’t say nothin’, Don. You’re
the brains of this here outfit, an’ ’thout
you say the word, I’ll behave. But when
the time comes and you want a fightin’ man,
just let me at him! When you want to run some
of these here crooks outer the country, you whisper
quiet like to old Bill Santry. Until then, I’ll
wait. That is ” He waved a warning
finger at Wade. “That is, up to a
certain point! We don’t want war, that
is to say, to want it, you understand me! But
by the great horned toad, I ain’t a-goin’
to let no lousy, empty headed, stinkin’, sheepherdin’
Swede wipe his feet on me. No, siree, not by no
means!”
Wade made no reply to this, and with
a further admonitory shake of his grizzled head, the
old man resumed his cooking.
“You’re sure that Chink’ll
be over in the mornin’?” he asked anxiously,
after a little; and Wade nodded abstractedly.
“Cookin’ ain’t no job for a white
man in this weather. Breakin’ rock in Hell
would be plumb cool alongside of it.” He
wiped the sweat from his forehead with the back of
his hand. “Say, do you remember them biscuits
you made over in the Painted Rock country? The
batch I et ain’t digisted yet.
“Every time I cook a meal,”
he went on, chuckling, “I think about the time
Flour Sack Jim hired out to wrastle grub for that Englishman.
Flour Sack was one of your real old timers, rough
and ready, with a heart as big as a bucket, but he
wouldn’t bend his knee to no man livin’.
The English jasper was all kinds of a swell, with
money enough to burn a wet dog. For family reasons,
he’d bought him a ranch and started to raise
hosses. He wore one of these here two-peaked hats,
with a bow on top, and he always had an eyeglass screwed
into one eye.
“The first night after Flour
Sack come on his job, he got up a mess of jack-rabbit
stew, and stickin’ his head out the door, yelled
in real round-up style ’Come and
git it!’ Then he piled up his own plate and
started in ter eat. In about ten minutes, in walks
the English dude, and when he seen the cook eatin’
away, he rares back and says, haughty-like ’Bless
me soul, I cawn’t eat with me servants, doncher
know.’ Flour Sack never bats an eye, but
says, with his mouth full ’Take a cheer,’
he says, ‘an’ wait until I git through.’”
Although Wade had heard the story
before, he laughed pleasantly as Santry began to dish
up the food; then the latter summoned the hired men.
“Mind, now, Bill,” Wade
admonished. “Not a word about the sheep.”
The next morning, after a restless
night, the young rancher set out alone for the sheep
camp. He was more than ever concerned over the
outlook, because sleep had brought to his pillow visions
of cattle starving on a denuded range, and of Santry
and Race Moran engaged in a death struggle. Particularly
because of the danger of this, he had insisted upon
Santry staying at home. The old plainsman, scarred
veteran of many a frontier brawl, was too quick tempered
and too proficient with his six-shooter to take back-talk
from the despised sheep herders or to bandy words
with a man he feared and hated. Wade was becoming
convinced that Moran was responsible for the invasion
of the range, although still at a loss for his reasons.
The whole affair was marked with Moran’s handiwork
and the silent swiftness of his methods.
This Race Moran was a stranger who
had come to Crawling Water some months before, and
for reasons best known to himself, had been trying
to ingratiate himself in the neighborhood, but, although
he seemed to have plenty of funds, the ranch and stock
men did not take kindly to his advances. He posed
as the agent of some Eastern capitalists, and he had
opened an office which for sumptuous appointments had
never been equaled in that part of the country; but
he had not been able to buy or lease land at the prices
he offered and his business apparently had not prospered.
Then sheep had begun to appear in great flocks in various
parts of the surrounding country and some of these
flocks to overflow into Crawling Water Valley.
Moran denied, at first, that they had come at his
instance, but later on, he tacitly admitted to the
protesting cattlemen that he had a certain amount
of interest in sheep raising.
More far-sighted than some of his
neighbors, Wade had leased a large strip of land in
the valley for use as winter range. Moran had
seemed to want this land badly, and had offered a
really fair price for it, but Wade had not cared to
sell. Relying upon his privilege as lessee, Wade
had not feared the approach of the sheep, and he had
no reason to wish to dispose of his holdings.
Now, it began to look as if the purpose was to “sheep”
him out of his own territory, so that the agent might
buy up the lease and homestead rights on practically
his own terms. The thing had been done before
in various parts of the cattle country.
Cattle and sheep cannot live on the
same range, and when sheep take possession of a country,
cattle must move out of it, or starve. No wonder,
then, that the cattlemen of Crawling Water Valley were
aroused. Their livelihood was slipping away from
them, day by day, for unless prompt steps were taken
the grass would be ruined by the woolly plague.
Thus far, Gordon Wade, a leader in
the cattle faction, had been firm for peaceful measures
though some of the ranchers had threatened an open
war on the herders. “Avoid bloodshed at
almost any cost,” had been his advice, and he
had done his best to restrain the more hot-headed members
of his party, who were for shooting the sheep and driving
out the herders at the rifle point. But there
was a limit, even to Wade’s patience, and his
jaws squared grimly as he considered the probable
result, should Moran and his followers, the sheep owners,
persist in their present course of action.
It was still very early in the morning
when Wade arrived at the herder’s camp.
Oscar Jensen, a short, thick-set man, with an unwholesome,
heavy face, stepped out of the little tent as the
rancher rode up.
“Mornin’.”
“Good-morning!” The cattleman
affected a cheerfulness which he did not feel.
“Are these your sheep, Mr. Jensen?” He
waved in the direction of the grazing band, a dirty
white patch on the green of the valley.
“Yes.”
“Perhaps you don’t know
that you are on Double Arrow land? I’ve
ridden over to ask you to move your sheep. They’re
spoiling our grass.”
Jensen grinned sardonically, for he
had been expecting Wade’s visit and was prepared
for it.
“I got a right here,”
he said. “There’s plenty good grass
here and I take my sheep where they get fat.
This is government land.”
“It is government land,”
Wade quietly acknowledged, “but you have no
right on it. I control this range, I’ve
paid for it, and unless you move within the next twelve
hours you’ll be arrested for trespass.”
The sheepman’s sullen face darkened with anger.
“Who’ll do it? The
sheriff won’t, and I’m not afeerd of you
cattlemen. My sheep must eat as well as your
cattle, and I got a good right here. I won’t
move.”
“Then remember that I warned
you if you get into trouble, Jensen. There’s
plenty of open range and good water on the other side
of the hills. I advise you to trail your sheep
there before it is too late. Don’t think
that Race Moran can save you from the law. Moran
is not running this valley, and don’t you forget
it.”
“How do you know Moran’s
backin’ me?” The Swede could not conceal
his surprise. “You can’t bluff me,
Wade. I know my rights, and I’m goin’
to stick to ’em.”
“The devil you say!” Now
that he was sure of Moran’s complicity in the
matter, Wade felt himself becoming angry, in spite
of his resolve to keep cool. “You’d
best listen to reason and pull out while you’re
able to travel. There are men in this valley
who won’t waste time in talk when they know
you’re here.”
“Bah!” Jensen snorted
contemptuously. “I can take care of myself.
I know what I’m doin’, I tell you.”
“You may, but you don’t
act like it,” was Wade’s parting remark,
as he turned his horse and rode off.
“Go to hell!” the Swede shouted after
him.
Heading toward Crawling Water, the
ranch owner rode rapidly over the sun-baked ground,
too full of rage to take notice of anything except
his own helplessness. The sting of Jensen’s
impudence lay in Wade’s realization that to
enlist the aid of the sheriff against the sheep man
would be very difficult, if not altogether impossible.
There was very little law in that region, and what
little there was seemed, somehow, to have been taken
under the direction of Race Moran.
It was now broad day and the prairie
warmed to the blazing sun. Long, rolling stretches
of grass, topped with rocks and alkaline sand, gave
back a blinding glare like the reflection of a summer
sea, from which arose a haze of gray dust like ocean
mists over distant reaches. Far to the South,
a lone butte lifted its corrugated front in forbidding
majesty.
Beyond the summit of the butte was
a greenish-brown plateau of sagebrush and bunch-grass.
Behind this mesa, a range of snow-topped mountains
cut the horizon with their white peaks, and in their
deep and gloomy canyons lurked great shadows of cool,
rich green. As far as the eye could see, there
was no sign of life save Wade and his mount.
The horse’s feet kicked up a
cloud of yellow dust that hung in the air like smoke
from a battery of cannon. It enveloped the ranchman,
who rode with the loose seat and straight back of
his kind; it came to lie deeply on his shoulders and
on his broad-brimmed Stetson hat, and in the wrinkles
of the leather chaps that encased his legs. He
looked steadily ahead, from under reddened eyelids,
over the trackless plain that encompassed him.
At a pace which would speedily cover the twenty odd
miles to Crawling Water, he rode on his way to see
Race Moran.
Two hours later Oscar Jensen was shot
from behind as he was walking alone, a little distance
from his camp. He fell dead and his assassin
disappeared without being seen.