Don Lovell and Jim Flood returned
from Lasalle County on the last day of February.
They had spent a week along the Upper Nueces, and
before returning to the ranch closed a trade on thirty-four
hundred five and six year old beeves. According
to their report, the cattle along the river had wintered
in fine condition, and the grass had already started
in the valley. This last purchase concluded the
buying for trail purposes, and all absent foremen
were notified to be on hand at the ranch on March 10,
for the beginning of active operations. Only
some ten of us had wintered at headquarters in Medina
County, and as about ninety men would be required
for the season’s work, they would have to be
secured elsewhere. All the old foremen expected
to use the greater portion of the men who were in
their employ the year before, and could summon them
on a few days’ notice. But Forrest and myself
were compelled to hire entirely new outfits, and it
was high time we were looking up our help.
One of Flood’s regular outfit
had married during the winter, and with Forrest’s
and my promotion, he had only to secure three new
men. He had dozens of applications from good cow-hands,
and after selecting for himself offered the others
to Quince and me. But my brother Bob arrived
at the ranch, from our home in Karnes County, two
days later, having also a surplus of men at his command.
Although he did not show any enthusiasm over my promotion,
he offered to help me get up a good outfit of boys.
I had about half a dozen good fellows in view, and
on Bob’s approval of them, he selected from
his overplus six more as first choice and four as
second. It would take me a week of constant riding
to see all these men, and as Flood and Forrest had
made up an outfit for the latter from the former’s
available list, Quince and I saddled up and rode away
to hire outfits. Forrest was well acquainted in
Wilson, where Lovell had put up several trail herds,
and as it joined my home county, we bore each other
company the first day.
A long ride brought us to the Atascosa,
where we stayed all night. The next morning we
separated, Quince bearing due east for Floresville,
while I continued southeast towards my home near Cibollo
Ford on the San Antonio River. It had been over
a year since I had seen the family, and on reaching
the ranch, my father gruffly noticed me, but my mother
and sisters received me with open arms. I was
a mature man of twenty-eight at the time, mustached,
and stood six feet to a plumb-line. The family
were cognizant of my checkered past, and although
never mentioning it, it seemed as if my misfortunes
had elevated me in the estimation of my sisters, while
to my mother I had become doubly dear.
During the time spent in that vicinity,
I managed to reach home at night as often as possible.
Constantly using fresh horses, I covered a wide circle
of country, making one ride down the river into Goliad
County of over fifty miles, returning the next day.
Within a week I had made up my outfit, including the
horse-wrangler and cook. Some of the men were
ten years my senior, while only a few were younger,
but I knew that these latter had made the trip before
and were as reliable as their elders. The wages
promised that year were fifty dollars a month, the
men to furnish only their own saddles and blankets,
and at that figure I picked two pastoral counties,
every man bred to the occupation. The trip promised
six months’ work with return passage, and I
urged every one employed to make his appearance at
headquarters, in Medina, on or before the 15th of the
month. There was no railroad communication through
Karnes and Goliad counties at that time, and all the
boys were assured that their private horses would
have good pasturage at the home ranch while they were
away, and I advised them all to come on horseback.
By this method they would have a fresh horse awaiting
them on their return from the North with which to
continue their homeward journey. All the men
engaged were unmarried, and taken as a whole, I flattered
myself on having secured a crack outfit.
I was in a hurry to get back to the
ranch. There had been nothing said about the
remudas before leaving, and while we had an abundance
of horses, no one knew them better than I did.
For that reason I wanted to be present when their
allotment was made, for I knew that every foreman
would try to get the best mounts, and I did not propose
to stand behind the door and take the culls. Many
of the horses had not had a saddle on them in eight
months, while all of them had run idle during the
winter in a large mesquite pasture and were in fine
condition with the opening of spring. So bidding
my folks farewell, I saddled at noon and took a cross-country
course for the ranch, covering the hundred and odd
miles in a day and a half. Reaching headquarters
late at night, I found that active preparations had
been going on during my absence. There were new
wagons to rig, harness to oil, and a carpenter was
then at work building chuck-boxes for each of the
six commissaries. A wholesale house in the city
had shipped out a stock of staple supplies, almost
large enough to start a store. There were whole
coils of new rope of various sizes, from lariats to
corral cables, and a sufficient amount of the largest
size to make a stack of hobbles as large as a haycock.
Four new branding-irons to the wagon, the regulation
“Circle Dot,” completed the main essentials.
All the foremen had reported at the
ranch, with the exception of Forrest, who came in
the next evening with three men. The division
of the horses had not even come up for discussion,
but several of the boys about headquarters who were
friendly to my interests posted me that the older
foremen were going to claim first choice. Archie
Tolleston, next to Jim Flood in seniority in Lovell’s
employ, had spent every day riding among the horses,
and had even boasted that he expected to claim fifteen
of the best for his own saddle. Flood was not
so particular, as his destination was in southern
Dakota, but my brother Bob was again ticketed for
the Crow Agency in Montana, and would naturally expect
a good remuda. Tolleston was going to western
Wyoming, while the Fort Buford cattle were a two-weeks’
later delivery and fully five hundred miles farther
travel. On my return Lovell was in the city,
but I felt positive that if he took a hand in the
division, Tolleston would only run on the rope once.
A few days before the appointed time,
the men began thronging into headquarters. Down
to the minutest detail about the wagons and mule teams,
everything was shipshape. The commissary department
was stocked for a month, and everything was ready to
harness in and move. Lovell’s headquarters
was a stag ranch, and as fast as the engaged cooks
reported, they were assigned to wagons, and kept open
house in relieving the home cocinero. In the
absence of our employer, Flood was virtually at the
head of affairs, and artfully postponed the division
of horses until the last moment. My outfit had
all come in in good time, and we were simply resting
on our oars until the return of old man Don from San
Antonio. The men were jubilant and light-hearted
as a lot of school-boys, and with the exception of
a feeling of jealousy among the foremen over the remudas,
we were a gay crowd, turning night into day.
But on the return of our employer, all frivolity ceased,
and the ranch stood at attention. The only unfinished
work was the division of the horses, and but a single
day remained before the agreed time for starting.
Jim Flood had met his employer at the station the
night before, and while returning to the ranch, the
two discussed the apportionment of the saddle stock.
The next morning all the foremen were called together,
when the drover said to his trail bosses:
“Boys, I suppose you are all
anxious to get a good remuda for this summer’s
trip. Well, I’ve got them for you.
The only question is, how can we distribute them equitably
so that all interests will be protected. One
herd may not have near the distance to travel that
the others have. It would look unjust to give
it the best horses, and yet it may have the most trouble.
Our remudas last year were all picked animals.
They had an easy year’s work. With the
exception of a few head, we have the same mounts and
in much better condition than last year. This
is about my idea of equalizing things. You four
old foremen will use your remudas of last year.
Then each of you six bosses select twenty-five head
each of the Dodge horses,—turn and turn
about. Add those to your old remudas, and cull
back your surplus, allowing ten to the man, twelve
to the foreman, and five extra to each herd in case
of cripples or of galled backs. By this method,
each herd will have two dozen prime saddlers, the pick
of a thousand picked ones, and fit for any man who
was ever in my employ. I’m breaking in
two new foremen this year, and they shall have no
excuse for not being mounted, and will divide the
remainder. Now, take four men apiece and round
up the saddle stock, and have everything in shape
to go into camp to-night. I’ll be present
at the division, and I warn you all that I want no
clashing.”
A ranch remuda was driven in, and
we saddled. There were about thirty thousand
acres in the pasture, and by eleven o’clock
everything was thrown together. The private horses
of all the boys had been turned into a separate inclosure,
and before the cutting out commenced, every mother’s
son, including Don Lovell, arrived at the round-up.
There were no corrals on the ranch which would accommodate
such a body of animals, and thus the work had to be
done in the open; but with the force at hand we threw
a cordon around them, equal to a corral, and the cutting
out to the four quarters commenced.
The horses were gentle and handled
easily. Forrest and I turned to and helped our
old foreman cut out his remuda of the year before.
There were several horses in my old mount that I would
have liked to have again, but I knew it was useless
to try and trade Jim out of them, as he knew their
qualities and would have robbed me in demanding their
equivalent. When the old remudas were again separated,
they were counted and carefully looked over by both
foremen and men, and were open to the inspection of
all who cared to look. Everything was passing
very pleasantly, and the cutting of the extra twenty-five
began. Then my selfishness was weighed in the
balance and found to be full weight. I had ridden
over a hundred of the best of them, but when any one
appealed to me, even my own dear brother, I was as
dumb as an oyster about a horse. Tolleston, especially,
cursed, raved, and importuned me to help him get a
good private mount, but I was as innocent as I was
immovable. The trip home from Dodge was no pleasure
jaunt, and now I was determined to draw extra pay in
getting the cream of that horse herd. There were
other features governing my actions: Flood was
indifferent; Forrest, at times, was cruel to horses,
and had I helped my brother, I might have been charged
with favoritism. Dave Sponsilier was a good horseman,
as his selections proved, and I was not wasting any
love and affection on Archie Tolleston that day, anyhow.
That no undue advantage should be
taken, Lovell kept tally of every horse cut out, and
once each foreman had taken his number, he was waved
out of the herd. I did the selecting of my own,
and with the assistance of one man, was constantly
waiting my turn. With all the help he could use,
Tolleston was over half an hour making his selections,
and took the only blind horse in the entire herd.
He was a showy animal, a dapple gray, fully fifteen
hands high, bred in north Texas, and belonged to one
of the whole remudas bought in Dodge. At the
time of his purchase, neither Lovell nor Flood detected
anything wrong, and no one could see anything in the
eyeball which would indicate he was moon-eyed.
Yet any horseman need only notice him closely to be
satisfied of his defect, as he was constantly shying
from other horses and objects and smelled everything
which came within his reach. There were probably
half a dozen present who knew of his blindness, but
not a word was said until all the extras were chosen
and the culling out of the overplus of the various
remudas began. It started in snickers, and before
the cutting back was over developed into peals of
laughter, as man after man learned that the dapple
gray in Tolleston’s remuda was blind.
Among the very last to become acquainted
with the fact was the trail foreman himself.
After watching the horse long enough to see his mistake,
Tolleston culled the gray back and rode into the herd
to claim another. But the drover promptly summoned
his foreman out, and, as they met, Lovell said to
his trail boss, “Arch, you’re no better
than anybody else. I bought that gray and paid
my good money for him. No doubt but the man who
sold him has laughed about it often since, and if
ever we meet, I’ll take my hat off and compliment
him on being the only person who ever sold me a moon-eyed
horse. I’m still paying my tuition, and
you needn’t flare up when the laugh’s
on you. You have a good remuda without him, and
the only way you can get another horse out of that
herd is with the permission of Quince Forrest and Tom
Quirk.”
“Well, if the permission of
those new foremen is all I lack, then I’ll cut
all the horses I want,” retorted Tolleston, and
galloped back towards the herd. But Quince and
I were after him like a flash, followed leisurely
by Lovell. As he slacked his mount to enter the
mass of animals, I passed him, jerking the bridle reins
from his hand. Throwing my horse on his haunches,
I turned just as Forrest slapped Tolleston on the
back, and said: “Look-ee here, Arch; just
because you’re a little hot under the collar,
don’t do anything brash, for fear you may regret
it afterward. I’m due to take a little
pasear myself this summer, and I always did like to
be well mounted. Now, don’t get your back
up or attempt to stand up any bluffs, for I can whip
you in any sized circle you can name. You never
saw me burn powder, did you? Well, just you keep
on acting the d-— fool if you want a little smoke
thrown in your face. Just fool with me and I’ll
fog you till you look like an angel in the clouds.”
But old man Don reached us, and raised
his hand. I threw the reins back over the horse’s
head. Tolleston was white with rage, but before
he could speak our employer waved us aside and said,
“Tom, you and Quince clear right out of here
and I’ll settle this matter. Arch, there’s
your remuda. Take it and go about your business
or say you don’t want to. Now, we know each
other, and I’ll not mince or repeat any words
with you. Go on.”
“Not an inch will I move until
I get another horse,” hissed Tolleston between
gasps. “If it lies between you and me, then
I’ll have one in place of that gray, or you’ll
get another foreman. Now, you have my terms and
ticket.”
“Very well then, Archie; that
changes the programme entirely,” replied Lovell,
firmly. “You’ll find your private
horse in the small pasture, and we’ll excuse
you for the summer. Whenever a man in my employ
gets the impression that I can’t get along without
him, that moment he becomes useless to me. It
seems that you are bloated with that idea, and a season’s
rest and quiet may cool you down and make a useful
man of you again. Remember that you’re
always welcome at my ranch, and don’t let this
make us strangers,” he called back as he turned
away.
Riding over with us to where a group
were sitting on their horses, our employer scanned
the crowd without saying a word. Turning halfway
in his saddle, he looked over towards Flood’s
remuda and said: “One of you boys please
ride over and tell Paul I want him.” During
the rather embarrassing interim, the conversation
instantly changed, and we borrowed tobacco and rolled
cigarettes to kill time.
Priest was rather slow in making his
appearance, riding leisurely, but on coming up innocently
inquired of his employer, “Did you want to see
me?”
“Yes. Paul, I’ve
just lost one of my foremen. I need a good reliable
man to take a herd to Fort Washakie. It’s
an Indian agency on the head waters of the North Platte
in Wyoming. Will you tackle the job?”
“A good soldier is always subject
to orders,” replied The Rebel with a military
salute. “If you have a herd for delivery
in Wyoming, give me the men and horses, and I’ll
put the cattle there if possible. You are the
commandant in the field, and I am subject to instructions.”
“There’s your remuda and
outfit, then,” said Lovell, pointing to the
one intended for Tolleston, “and you’ll
get a commissary at the ranch and go into camp this
evening. You’ll get your herd in Nueces
County, and Jim will assist in the receiving.
Any other little details will all be arranged before
you get away.”
Calling for all the men in Tolleston’s
outfit, the two rode away for that remuda. Shortly
before the trouble arose, our employer instructed
those with the Buford cattle to take ten extra horses
for each herd. There were now over a hundred and
forty head to be culled back, and Sponsilier was entitled
to ten of them. In order to be sure of our numbers,
we counted the remaining band, and Forrest and I trimmed
them down to two hundred and fifty-four head.
As this number was too small to be handled easily in
the open, we decided to take them into the corrals
for the final division. After the culling back
was over, and everything had started for the ranch,
to oblige Sponsilier, I remained behind and helped
him to retrim his remuda. Unless one knew the
horses personally, it was embarrassing even to try
and pick ten of the best ones from the overplus.
But I knew many of them at first hand, and at Dave’s
request, after picking out the extra ones, continued
selecting others in exchange for horses in his old
band. We spent nearly an hour cutting back and
forth, or until we were both satisfied that his saddle
stock could not be improved from the material at hand.
The ranch headquarters were fully
six miles from the round-up. Leaving Sponsilier
delighted with the change in his remuda, I rode to
overtake the undivided band which were heading for
the ranch corrals. On coming up with them, Forrest
proposed that we divide the horses by a running cut
in squads of ten, and toss for choice. Once they
were in the corrals, this could have been easily done
by simply opening a gate and allowing blocks of ten
to pass alternately from the main into smaller inclosures.
But I was expecting something like this from Quince,
and had entirely different plans of my own. Forrest
and I were good friends, but he was a foxy rascal,
and I had never wavered in my determination to get
the pick of that horse herd. Had I accepted his
proposal, the chance of a spinning coin might have
given him a decided advantage, and I declined his
proposition. I had a remuda in sight that my
very being had hungered for, and now I would take
no chance of losing it. But on the other hand,
I proposed to Forrest that he might have the assistance
of two men in Flood’s outfit who had accompanied
the horse herd home from Dodge. In the selecting
of Jim’s extra twenty-five, the opinion of these
two lads, as the chosen horses proved, was a decided
help to their foreman. But Quince stood firm,
and arguing the matter, we reached the corrals and
penned the band.
The two top bunches were held separate
and were left a mile back on the prairie, under herd.
The other remudas were all in sight of the ranch,
while a majority of the men were eating a late dinner.
Still contending for his point, Forrest sent a lad
to the house to ask our employer to come over to the
corrals. On his appearance, accompanied by Flood,
each of us stated our proposition.
“Well, the way I size this up,”
said old man Don, “one of you wants to rely
on his own judgment and the other don’t.
It looks to me, Quince, you want a gambler’s
chance where you can’t lose. Tom’s
willing to bank on his own judgment, but you ain’t.
Now, I like a man who does his own thinking, and to
give you a good lesson in that line, why, divide them,
horse and horse, turn about. Now, I’ll
spin this coin for first pick, and while it’s
in the air, Jim will call the turn. . . . Tom
wins first choice.”
“That’s all right, Mr.
Lovell,” said Quince, smilingly. “I
just got the idea that you wanted the remudas for
the Buford herds to be equally good. How can
you expect it when Tom knows every horse and I never
saddled one of them. Give me the same chance,
and I might know them as well as the little boy knew
his pap.”
“You had the same chance,”
I put in, “but didn’t want it. You
were offered the Pine Ridge horses last year to take
back to Dodge, and you kicked like a bay steer.
But I swallowed their dust to the Arkansaw, and from
there home we lived in clouds of alkali. You
went home drunk and dressed up, with a cigar in your
mouth and your feet through the car window, claiming
you was a brother-in-law to Jay Gould, and simply
out on a tour of inspection. Now you expect me
to give you the benefit of my experience and rob myself.
Not this summer, John Quincy.”
But rather than let Forrest feel that
he was being taken advantage of, I repeated my former
proposition. Accepting it as a last resort, the
two boys were sent for and the dividing commenced.
Remounting our horses, we entered the large corral,
and as fast as they were selected the different outfits
were either roped or driven singly through a guarded
gate. It took over an hour of dusty work to make
the division, but when it was finished I had a remuda
of a hundred and fifty-two saddle horses that would
make a man willing to work for his board and the privilege
of riding them. Turning out of the corrals, Priest
and I accompanied the horses out on the prairie where
our toppy ones were being grazed. Paul was tickled
over my outfit of saddle stock, but gave me several
hints that he was entitled to another picked mount.
I attempted to explain that he had a good remuda,
but he still insisted, and I promised him if he would
be at my wagon the next morning when we corralled,
he should have a good one. I could well afford
to be generous with my old bunkie.
There now only remained the apportionment
of the work-stock. Four mules were allowed to
the wagon, and in order to have them in good condition
they had been grain-fed for the past month. In
their allotment the Buford herds were given the best
teams, and when mine was pointed out by my employer,
the outfit assisted the cook to harness in. Giving
him instructions to go into camp on a creek three
miles south of headquarters, my wagon was the second
one to get away. Some of the teams bolted at the
start, and only for timely assistance Sponsilier’s
commissary would have been overturned in the sand.
Two of the wagons headed west for Uvalde, while my
brother Bob’s started southeast for Bee County.
The other two belonging to Flood and The Rebel would
camp on the same creek as mine, their herds being
also south. Once the wagons were off, the saddle
stock was brought in and corralled for our first mounts.
The final allotment of horses to the men would not
take place until the herds were ready to be received,
and until then, they would be ridden uniformly but
promiscuously. With instructions from our employer
to return to the ranch after making camp, the remudas
were started after the wagons.
On our return after darkness, the
ranch was as deserted as a school-house on Saturday.
A Mexican cook and a few regular ranch hands were
all that were left. Archie Tolleston had secured
his horse and quit headquarters before any one had
even returned from the round-up. When the last
of the foremen came in, our employer delivered his
final messages. “Boys,” said he, “I’ll
only detain you a few minutes. I’m going
west in the morning to Uvalde County, and will be
present at the receiving of Quince and Dave’s
herds. After they start, I’ll come back
to the city and take stage to Oakville. But you
go right ahead and receive your cattle, Bob, for we
don’t know what may turn up. Flood will
help Tom first, and then Paul, to receive their cattle.
That will give the Buford herds the first start, and
I’ll be waiting for you at Abilene when you
reach there. And above all else, boys, remember
that I’ve strained my credit in this drive, and
that the cattle must be A 1, and that we must deliver
them on the spot in prime condition. Now, that’s
all, but you’d better be riding so as to get
an early start in the morning.”
Our employer walked with us to the
outer gate where our horses stood at the hitch-rack.
That he was reticent in his business matters was well
known among all his old foremen, including Forrest
and myself. If he had a confidant among his men,
Jim Flood was the man—and there were a
few things he did not know. As we mounted our
horses to return to our respective camps, old man
Don quietly took my bridle reins in hand and allowed
the others to ride away. “I want a parting
word with you, Tom,” said he a moment later.
“Something has happened to-day which will require
the driving of the Buford herds in some road brand
other than the ‘Circle Dot.’ The
first blacksmith shop you pass, have your irons altered
into ‘Open A’s,’ and I’ll do
the same with Quince and Dave’s brands.
Of the why or wherefore of this, say nothing to any
one, as no one but myself knows. Don’t breathe
a word even to Flood, for he don’t know any
more than he should. When the time comes, if
it ever does, you’ll know all that is necessary—or
nothing. That’s all.”