THE START
On the morning of April 1, 1882, our
Circle Dot herd started on its long tramp to the Blackfoot
Agency in Montana. With six men on each side,
and the herd strung out for three quarters of a mile,
it could only be compared to some mythical serpent
or Chinese dragon, as it moved forward on its sinuous,
snail-like course. Two riders, known as point
men, rode out and well back from the lead cattle, and
by riding forward and closing in as occasion required,
directed the course of the herd. The main body
of the herd trailed along behind the leaders like
an army in loose marching order, guarded by outriders,
known as swing men, who rode well out from the advancing
column, warding off range cattle and seeing that none
of the herd wandered away or dropped out. There
was no driving to do; the cattle moved of their own
free will as in ordinary travel. Flood seldom
gave orders; but, as a number of us had never worked
on the trail before, at breakfast on the morning of
our start he gave in substance these general directions:—
“Boys, the secret of trailing
cattle is never to let your herd know that they are
under restraint. Let everything that is done be
done voluntarily by the cattle. From the moment
you let them off the bed ground in the morning until
they are bedded at night, never let a cow take a step,
except in the direction of its destination. In
this manner you can loaf away the day, and cover from
fifteen to twenty miles, and the herd in the mean
time will enjoy all the freedom of an open range.
Of course, it’s long, tiresome hours to the men;
but the condition of the herd and saddle stock demands
sacrifices on our part, if any have to be made.
And I want to caution you younger boys about your
horses; there is such a thing as having ten horses
in your string, and at the same time being afoot.
You are all well mounted, and on the condition of
the remuda depends the success and safety of
the herd. Accidents will happen to horses, but
don’t let it be your fault; keep your saddle
blankets dry and clean, for no better word can be
spoken of a man than that he is careful of his horses.
Ordinarily a man might get along with six or eight
horses, but in such emergencies as we are liable to
meet, we have not a horse to spare, and a man afoot
is useless.”
And as all of us younger boys learned
afterward, there was plenty of good, solid, horse-sense
in Flood’s advice; for before the trip ended
there were men in our outfit who were as good as afoot,
while others had their original mounts, every one
fit for the saddle. Flood had insisted on a good
mount of horses, and Lovell was cowman enough to know
that what the mule is to the army the cow-horse is
to the herd.
The first and second day out there
was no incident worth mentioning. We traveled
slowly, hardly making an average day’s drive.
The third morning Flood left us, to look out a crossing
on the Arroyo Colorado. On coming down to receive
the herd, we had crossed this sluggish bayou about
thirty-six miles north of Brownsville. It was
a deceptive-looking stream, being over fifty feet
deep and between bluff banks. We ferried our
wagon and saddle horses over, swimming the loose ones.
But the herd was keeping near the coast line for the
sake of open country, and it was a question if there
was a ford for the wagon as near the coast as our
course was carrying us. The murmurings of the
Gulf had often reached our ears the day before, and
herds had been known, in former years, to cross from
the mainland over to Padre Island, the intervening
Laguna Madre being fordable.
We were nooning when Flood returned
with the news that it would be impossible to cross
our wagon at any point on the bayou, and that we would
have to ford around the mouth of the stream. Where
the fresh and salt water met in the laguna, there
had formed a delta, or shallow bar; and by following
its contour we would not have over twelve to fourteen
inches of water, though the half circle was nearly
two miles in length. As we would barely have
time to cross that day, the herd was at once started,
veering for the mouth of the Arroyo Colorado.
On reaching it, about the middle of the afternoon,
the foreman led the way, having crossed in the morning
and learned the ford. The wagon followed, the
saddle horses came next, while the herd brought up
the rear. It proved good footing on the sandbar,
but the water in the laguna was too salty for the
cattle, though the loose horses lay down and wallowed
in it. We were about an hour in crossing, and
on reaching the mainland met a vaquero, who directed
us to a large fresh-water lake a few miles inland,
where we camped for the night.
It proved an ideal camp, with wood,
water, and grass in abundance, and very little range
stock to annoy us. We had watered the herd just
before noon, and before throwing them upon the bed
ground for the night, watered them a second time.
We had a splendid camp-fire that night, of dry live
oak logs, and after supper was over and the first
guard had taken the herd, smoking and story telling
were the order of the evening. The camp-fire
is to all outdoor life what the evening fireside is
to domestic life. After the labors of the day
are over, the men gather around the fire, and the
social hour of the day is spent in yarning. The
stories told may run from the sublime to the ridiculous,
from a true incident to a base fabrication, or from
a touching bit of pathos to the most vulgar vulgarity.
“Have I ever told this outfit
my experience with the vigilantes when I was a kid?”
inquired Bull Durham. There was a general negative
response, and he proceeded. “Well, our folks
were living on the Frio at the time, and there was
a man in our neighborhood who had an outfit of four
men out beyond Nueces Cañon hunting wild cattle for
their hides. It was necessary to take them out
supplies about every so often, and on one trip he
begged my folks to let me go along for company.
I was a slim slip of a colt about fourteen at the time,
and as this man was a friend of ours, my folks consented
to let me go along. We each had a good saddle
horse, and two pack mules with provisions and ammunition
for the hunting camp. The first night we made
camp, a boy overtook us with the news that the brother
of my companion had been accidentally killed by a
horse, and of course he would have to return.
Well, we were twenty miles on our way, and as it would
take some little time to go back and return with the
loaded mules, I volunteered, like a fool kid, to go
on and take the packs through.
“The only question was, could
I pack and unpack. I had helped him at this work,
double-handed, but now that I was to try it alone,
he showed me what he called a squaw hitch, with which
you can lash a pack single-handed. After putting
me through it once or twice, and satisfying himself
that I could do the packing, he consented to let me
go on, he and the messenger returning home during the
night. The next morning I packed without any
trouble and started on my way. It would take
me two days yet, poking along with heavy packs, to
reach the hunters. Well, I hadn’t made
over eight or ten miles the first morning, when, as
I rounded a turn in the trail, a man stepped out from
behind a rock, threw a gun in my face, and ordered
me to hold up my hands. Then another appeared
from the opposite side with his gun leveled on me.
Inside of half a minute a dozen men galloped up from
every quarter, all armed to the teeth. The man
on leaving had given me his gun for company, one of
these old smoke-pole, cap-and-ball six-shooters, but
I must have forgotten what guns were for, for I elevated
my little hands nicely. The leader of the party
questioned me as to who I was, and what I was doing
there, and what I had in those packs. That once,
at least, I told the truth. Every mother’s
son of them was cursing and cross-questioning me in
the same breath. They ordered me off my horse,
took my gun, and proceeded to verify my tale by unpacking
the mules. So much ammunition aroused their suspicions,
but my story was as good as it was true, and they never
shook me from the truth of it. I soon learned
that robbery was not their motive, and the leader
explained the situation.
“A vigilance committee had been
in force in that county for some time, trying to rid
the country of lawless characters. But lawlessness
got into the saddle, and had bench warrants issued
and served on every member of this vigilance committee.
As the vigilantes numbered several hundred, there
was no jail large enough to hold such a number, so
they were released on parole for appearance at court.
When court met, every man served with a capias”—
“Hold on! hold your horses just
a minute,” interrupted Quince Forrest, “I
want to get that word. I want to make a memorandum
of it, for I may want to use it myself sometime.
Capias? Now I have it; go ahead.”
“When court met, every man served
with a bench warrant from the judge presiding was
present, and as soon as court was called to order,
a squad of men arose in the court room, and the next
moment the judge fell riddled with lead. Then
the factions scattered to fight it out, and I was
passing through the county while matters were active.
“They confiscated my gun and
all the ammunition in the packs, but helped me to
repack and started me on my way. A happy thought
struck one of the men to give me a letter, which would
carry me through without further trouble, but the
leader stopped him, saying, ’Let the boy alone.
Your letter would hang him as sure as hell’s
hot, before he went ten miles farther.’
I declined the letter. Even then I didn’t
have sense enough to turn back, and inside of two hours
I was rounded up by the other faction. I had
learned my story perfectly by this time, but those
packs had to come off again for everything to be examined.
There was nothing in them now but flour and salt and
such things—nothing that they might consider
suspicious. One fellow in this second party took
a fancy to my horse, and offered to help hang me on
general principles, but kinder counsels prevailed.
They also helped me to repack, and I started on once
more. Before I reached my destination the following
evening, I was held up seven different times.
I got so used to it that I was happily disappointed
every shelter I passed, if some man did not step out
and throw a gun in my face.
“I had trouble to convince the
cattle hunters of my experiences, but the absence
of any ammunition, which they needed worst, at last
led them to give credit to my tale. I was expected
home within a week, as I was to go down on the Nueces
on a cow hunt which was making up, and I only rested
one day at the hunters’ camp. On their advice,
I took a different route on my way home, leaving the
mules behind me. I never saw a man the next day
returning, and was feeling quite gala on my good fortune.
When evening came on, I sighted a little ranch house
some distance off the trail, and concluded to ride
to it and stay overnight. As I approached, I
saw that some one lived there, as there were chickens
and dogs about, but not a person in sight. I dismounted
and knocked on the door, when, without a word, the
door was thrown wide open and a half dozen guns were
poked into my face. I was ordered into the house
and given a chance to tell my story again. Whether
my story was true or not, they took no chances on
me, but kept me all night. One of the men took
my horse to the stable and cared for him, and I was
well fed and given a place to sleep, but not a man
offered a word of explanation, from which I took it
they did not belong to the vigilance faction.
When it came time to go to bed, one man said to me,
’Now, sonny, don’t make any attempt to
get away, and don’t move out of your bed without
warning us, for you’ll be shot as sure as you
do. We won’t harm a hair on your head if
you’re telling us the truth; only do as you’re
told, for we’ll watch you.’
“By this time I had learned
to obey orders while in that county, and got a fair
night’s sleep, though there were men going and
coming all night. The next morning I was given
my breakfast; my horse, well cuffed and saddled, was
brought to the door, and with this parting advice
I was given permission to go: ’Son, if you’ve
told us the truth, don’t look back when you
ride away. You’ll be watched for the first
ten miles after leaving here, and if you’ve lied
to us it will go hard with you. Now, remember,
don’t look back, for these are times when no
one cares to be identified.’ I never questioned
that man’s advice; it was ‘die dog or
eat the hatchet’ with me. I mounted my
horse, waved the usual parting courtesies, and rode
away. As I turned into the trail about a quarter
mile from the house, I noticed two men ride out from
behind the stable and follow me. I remembered
the story about Lot’s wife looking back, though
it was lead and not miracles that I was afraid of
that morning.
“For the first hour I could
hear the men talking and the hoofbeats of their horses,
as they rode along always the same distance behind
me. After about two hours of this one-sided joke,
as I rode over a little hill, I looked out of the
corner of my eye back at my escort, still about a
quarter of a mile behind me. One of them noticed
me and raised his gun, but I instantly changed my
view, and the moment the hill hid me, put spurs to
my horse, so that when they reached the brow of the
hill, I was half a mile in the lead, burning the earth
like a canned dog. They threw lead close around
me, but my horse lengthened the distance between us
for the next five miles, when they dropped entirely
out of sight. By noon I came into the old stage
road, and by the middle of the afternoon reached home
after over sixty miles in the saddle without a halt.”
Just at the conclusion of Bull’s
story, Flood rode in from the herd, and after picketing
his horse, joined the circle. In reply to an
inquiry from one of the boys as to how the cattle were
resting, he replied,—
“This herd is breaking into
trail life nicely. If we’ll just be careful
with them now for the first month, and no bad storms
strike us in the night, we may never have a run the
entire trip. That last drink of water they had
this evening gave them a night-cap that’ll last
them until morning. No, there’s no danger
of any trouble to-night.”
For fully an hour after the return
of our foreman, we lounged around the fire, during
which there was a full and free discussion of stampedes.
But finally, Flood, suiting the action to the word
by arising, suggested that all hands hunt their blankets
and turn in for the night. A quiet wink from
Bull to several of the boys held us for the time being,
and innocently turning to Forrest, Durham inquired,—
“Where was—when was—was
it you that was telling some one about a run you were
in last summer? I never heard you tell it.
Where was it?”
“You mean on the Cimarron last
year when we mixed two herds,” said Quince,
who had taken the bait like a bass and was now fully
embarked on a yarn. “We were in rather
close quarters, herds ahead and behind us, when one
night here came a cow herd like a cyclone and swept
right through our camp. We tumbled out of our
blankets and ran for our horses, but before we could
bridle”—
Bull had given us the wink, and every
man in the outfit fell back, and the snoring that
checked the storyteller was like a chorus of rip saws
running through pine knots. Forrest took in the
situation at a glance, and as he arose to leave, looked
back and remarked,—
“You must all think that’s smart.”
Before he was out of hearing, Durham said to the rest
of us,—
“A few doses like that will
cure him of sucking eggs and acting smart, interrupting
folks.”