Two riders slumped comfortably in
their saddles as the ponies slowly ambled along.
The sun was hot, and the dust stifling, a cloud of
it forming a floating screen about the horsemen and
progressing with them down the trail.
One of the riders, a tall, lanky and
weather-beaten cowboy, taking a long breath, raised
his voice in what he doubtless intended to be a song.
It was, however, more a cry of anguish
as he bellowed forth:
“Leave me alone with a rope an’
a saddle,
Fold my spurs under my haid!
Give me a can of them sweet, yaller peaches,
’Cause why? My true-love is
daid!”
“Bad as all that; is it, Slim?”
asked the other, who, now that he had partly emerged
from the cloud of dust, could be seen as a lad of about
sixteen. He, like the other, older rider, was
attired cowboy fashion.
“Eh? What’s that,
Bud?” inquired the lanky one, seeming to arouse
as if from a day dream. “See suthin’?”
“Nope. I was just sort
of remarking about that sad song, and ”
“Oh, shucks! That wa’n’t
sad!” declared Slim Degnan, foreman of the Diamond
X ranch. “Guess I wa’n’t really
payin’ much attention to what I was singin’,
but if you want a real sad lament ”
“No, I don’t!” laughed
Bud Merkel, whose father was the owner of Diamond
X ranch. “Not that I blame you for feeling
sort of down and out,” he added.
“Oh, I don’t feel bad,
Bud!” came the hasty rejoinder. “We
did have more’n a ride than I figgered on, but
I don’t aim to put up no kick. It’s
all in the day’s work. You don’t
seem to mind it.”
“I should say not! We
had a bully time. I’d spend another night
out in the open if we had to. I like it!”
“Yes, you seem to take to it
like a duck does to water,” added Slim.
“But it’s a shame to mention ducks in the
same chapter with this atmosphere! Zow hippy!
But it’s hot an’ dusty an’ thirsty!
Come along there, you old hunk of jerked beef!”
he added to his pony, giving a gentle reminder with
the spurs and pulling on the reins. The pony
made a feeble attempt to increase its gait, but it
was no more than an attempt.
The animal that was ridden by Bud a
pinto started to follow the example of
the other.
“Regular mud-turtle gallop,” commented
the foreman.
“They’ll go faster when
they top the rise, and see the corral,” commented
Bud.
“An’ smell water!
That’s what I want, a long, sizzling, sozzling
drink of water!” cried Slim, whose name fitted
him better than did his clothes. Then he broke
forth again with:
“Oh, leave me alone with a rope an’ a
saddle ”
Slowly the riders plodded along.
The sun seemed to grow more hot and the dust more
thick. As they approached a hill, beyond which
lay the corral and ranch buildings of Diamond X, Bud
drew rein, thus halting his pony.
“Let’s give ’em
a breather before we hit the hill,” he suggested
to the foreman.
“I’m agreeable, son,”
was the foreman’s easy comment as he slung one
leg over the saddle and sat sideways.
Slim Degnan and Bud had ridden off
to look for a break in one of the many long lines
of wire fences that kept the stock of Diamond X somewhat
within bounds, and it had taken longer to locate and
repair the break than they had counted on.
They had been obliged to remain out
all night not that this was unusual, only
they had not exactly prepared for it and,
in consequence, did not have all the ordinary comforts.
But, as Bud had said, he had not minded it.
However, the ponies were rather used up, and the
riders in the same condition, and it was with equal
feelings of relief that they came within sight of
the last hill that lay between them and the ranch.
“Well, might as well mosey along,”
spoke Slim, at length. “Sooner we get
some water inside us, an’ th’ ponies, th’
better we’ll all be.”
“I reckon,” agreed Bud.
“But I don’t believe Zip Foster could
have done the job any quicker than we did.”
“Who?” queried Slim, with
a quizzical look at his companion.
“Zip Foster,” answered Bud.
“Never heard of him. What
outfit does he ride for?” asked the foreman,
but he saved Bud the embarrassment of answer by suddenly
rising in his saddle and looking off in the distance.
Bud had his own reasons for not answering
that seemingly natural question, and he was glad of
the diversion, though he was not at once aware of
what had caused it. But he followed the direction
of the foreman’s gaze, and, like him, saw arising
in the still air, about two miles away, a thin thread
of smoke a mere wisp, as though it had
dangled down from some fleecy cloud. But the
smoke was ascending and was not the beginning of a
fog descending.
“Can’t be any of our boys,”
murmured Slim. “They aren’t out on
round-up yet. An’ it’s too early
for grub.”
“Indians?” questioned
Bud. Sometimes the bucks from a neighboring
reservation felt the call of the wild, and slipped
out to have a forbidden feast on some cattleman’s
stock, only to be brought up with a round turn by
the government soldiers.
“Don’t think so,”
remarked Slim. “They don’t have much
chance t’ practice their wiles, but, with all
that, they know enough not t’ make a fire that
smokes. Must be some strangers. If it’s
any of them ornery sheep men,” he exclaimed,
“I’d feel like ”
“They wouldn’t dare!”
exclaimed Bud, for being the son of a cattle-ranchman
he had come to dislike and despise the sheep herders,
whose flocks ate so closely as to ruin the feeding
range for steers. The sheep would crop grass
down to the very roots, setting back its growth for
many months.
“No, I don’t reckon it
would be sheepers,” murmured Slim. “Wa’al,
mebby they know at the ranch. We’ll be
headin’ home now, I guess. Come on there,
you old tumble-bug!” he called to his horse,
and then he raised his voice and roared:
“Leave me alone with a rope an’
a saddle,
Fold my spurs under my haid!
Give me a can of them sweet, yaller peaches,
’Cause why? My true-love is
daid!”
Slim’s horse started off on
a lope, freshened by the rest, and Bud’s followed.
They topped the rise, and, then as the animals came
within sight and smell of their stables, and caught
the whiff of ever-welcome water, they dashed down
the slope toward the green valley in which nestled
the corral and buildings of Diamond X ranch.
“If I wasn’t so doggoned
tired,” said Slim to Bud as they prepared to
pull up on reaching the corral, “I’d ride
over after supper, and see what that smoke was.
I don’t perzactly like it.”
“Maybe I’ll go,”
offered Bud. “If it should happen
to be sheepers, dad’ll want to know it.”
“He shore will, son. But Zow
hippy! What’s going on here?” cried
Slim. He pointed toward the corral of the ranch a
fenced-off field where the cowboys kept their string
of ponies when the animals were not in use.
Here, too, spare animals were held against the time
of need.
Just now a crowd of cowboys surrounded
this corral. Some were perched on the rails
of the fence, and others leaned over. Some were
swinging their hats as though in encouragement, and
one was rapidly emptying his gun on the defenseless
air, which was further torn and shattered by wild
yells.
As the two wayfarers neared the corral,
there dashed from among the cattle punchers surrounding
it an exceedingly fat cowboy, whose face, wreathed
in smiles, was also wet with perspiration. He
swung his hat around in a circle and yelled shrilly:
“Some ridin’, boys! Some ridin’!
Go to it!”
“What’s the matter, Babe?”
asked Slim, of his assistant who had thus given vent
to his feelings.
“Go look! It’s so
good I don’t want to spoil it!” laughed
the fat one. “Two tenderfoots Oh,
my Hole me up, somebody!” he begged.
“Some ridin’!”
Bud had a glimpse, in the corral,
of a youth about his own age, flying rapidly around
the enclosure on the back of a bucking bronco.
The lad was holding on with both arms around the
horn of the saddle.
“Get him off!” cried Bud
in a high pitched voice, as he recognized the pony
to which the strange lad was clinging. “Tartar
will kill him! Get him off!”