The parting of the ways was reached.
On the morning of July 12, the different outfits in
charge of Lovell’s drive in ’84 started
on three angles of the compass for their final destination.
The Rosebud Agency, where Flood’s herd was to
be delivered on September 1, lay to the northeast
in Dakota. The route was not direct, and the
herd would be forced to make quite an elbow, touching
on the different forks of the Loup in order to secure
water. The Rebel and my brother would follow up
on the south side of the North Platte until near old
Fort Laramie, when their routes would separate, the
latter turning north for Montana, while Priest would
continue along the same watercourse to within a short
distance of his destination. The Buford herds
would strike due north from the first tributary putting
in from above, which we would intercept the second
morning out.
An early start was the order of the
day. My beeves were pushed from the bed-ground
with the first sign of dawn, and when the relief overtook
them, they were several miles back from the river
and holding a northwest course. My camp being
the lowest one on the North Fork, Forrest and Sponsilier,
also starting at daybreak, naturally took the lead,
the latter having fully a five-mile start over my
outfit. But as we left the valley and came up
on the mesa, there on an angle in our front, Flood’s
herd snailed along like an army brigade, anxious to
dispute our advance. The point-men veered our
cattle slightly to the left, and as the drag-end of
Flood’s beeves passed before us, standing in
our stirrups we waved our hats in farewell to the lads,
starting on their last tack for the Rosebud Agency.
Across the river were the dim outlines of two herds
trailing upstream, being distinguishable from numerous
others by the dust-clouds which marked the moving
from the grazing cattle. The course of the North
Platte was southwest, and on the direction which we
were holding, we would strike the river again during
the afternoon at a bend some ten or twelve miles above.
Near the middle of the forenoon we
were met by Hugh Morris. He was discouraged,
as it was well known now that his cattle would be
tendered in competition with ours at Fort Buford.
There was no comparison between the beeves, ours being
much larger, more uniform in weight, and in better
flesh. He looked over both Forrest’s and
Sponsilier’s herds before meeting us, and was
good enough judge of cattle to know that his stood
no chance against ours, if they were to be received
on their merits. We talked matters over for fully
an hour, and I advised him never to leave Keith County
until the last dollar in payment for his beeves was
in hand. Morris thought this was quite possible,
as information had reached him that the buyers had
recently purchased a remuda, and now, since they had
failed to take possession of two of Lovell’s
herds, it remained to be seen what the next move would
be. He thought it quite likely, though, that a
settlement could be effected whereby he would be relieved
at Ogalalla. Mutually hoping that all would turn
out well, we parted until our paths should cross again.
We intercepted the North Fork again
during the afternoon, watering from it for the last
time, and the next morning struck the Blue River,
the expected tributary. Sponsilier maintained
his position in the lead, but I was certain when we
reached the source of the Blue, David would fall to
the rear, as thenceforth there was neither trail nor
trace, map nor compass. The year before, Forrest
and I had been over the route to the Pine Ridge Agency,
and one or the other of us must take the lead across
a dry country between the present stream and tributaries
of the Niobrara. The Blue possessed the attributes
of a river in name only, and the third day up it,
Sponsilier crossed the tributary to allow either Forrest
or myself to take the lead. Quince professed
a remarkable ignorance and faulty memory as to the
topography of the country between the Blue and Niobrara,
and threw bouquets at me regarding my ability always
to find water. It is true that I had gone and
returned across this arid belt the year before, but
on the back trip it was late in the fall, and we were
making forty miles a day with nothing but a wagon and
remuda, water being the least of my troubles.
But a compromise was effected whereby we would both
ride out the country anew, leaving the herds to lie
over on the head waters of the Blue River. There
were several shallow lakes in the intervening country,
and on finding the first one sufficient to our needs,
the herds were brought up, and we scouted again in
advance. The abundance of antelope was accepted
as an assurance of water, and on recognizing certain
landmarks, I agreed to take the lead thereafter, and
we turned back. The seventh day out from the
Blue, the Box Buttes were sighted, at the foot of which
ran a creek by the same name, and an affluent of the
Niobrara. Contrary to expectations, water was
even more plentiful than the year before, and we grazed
nearly the entire distance. The antelope were
unusually tame; with six-shooters we killed quite a
number by flagging, or using a gentle horse for a
blind, driving the animal forward with the bridle
reins, tacking frequently, and allowing him to graze
up within pistol range.
The Niobrara was a fine grazing country.
Since we had over two months at our disposal, after
leaving the North Platte, every advantage was given
the cattle to round into form. Ten miles was
a day’s move, and the different outfits kept
in close touch with each other. We had planned
a picnic for the crossing of the Niobrara, and on
reaching that stream during the afternoon, Sponsilier
and myself crossed, camping a mile apart, Forrest
remaining on the south side. Wild raspberries
had been extremely plentiful, and every wagon had
gathered a quantity sufficient to make a pie for each
man. The cooks had mutually agreed to meet at
Sponsilier’s wagon and do the baking, and every
man not on herd was present in expectation of the
coming banquet. One of Forrest’s boys had
a fiddle, and bringing it along, the festivities opened
with a stag dance, the “ladies” being
designated by wearing a horse-hobble loosely around
their necks. While the pies were baking, a slow
process with Dutch ovens, I sat on the wagon-tongue
and played the violin by the hour. A rude imitation
of the gentler sex, as we had witnessed in dance-halls
in Dodge and Ogalalla, was reproduced with open shirt
fronts, and amorous advances by the sterner one.
The dancing ceased the moment the
banquet was ready. The cooks had experienced
considerable trouble in restraining some of the boys
from the too free exercise of what they looked upon
as the inalienable right of man to eat his pie when,
where, and how it best pleased him. But Sponsilier,
as host, stood behind the culinary trio, and overawed
the impetuous guests. The repast barely concluded
in time for the wranglers and first guard from Forrest’s
and my outfit to reach camp, catch night-horses, bed
the cattle, and excuse the herders, as supper was served
only at the one wagon. The relieved ones, like
eleventh-hour guests, came tearing in after darkness,
and the tempting spread soon absorbed them. As
the evening wore on, the loungers gathered in several
circles, and the raconteur held sway. The fact
that we were in a country in which game abounded suggested
numerous stories. The delights of cat-hunting
by night found an enthusiast in each one present.
Every dog in our memory, back to early boyhood, was
properly introduced and his best qualities applauded.
Not only cat-hounds but coon-dogs had a respectful
hearing.
“I remember a hound,”
said Forrest’s wrangler, “which I owned
when a boy back in Virginia. My folks lived in
the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in that
state. We were just as poor as our poorest neighbors.
But if there was any one thing that that section was
rich in it was dogs, principally hounds. This
dog of mine was four years old when I left home to
go to Texas. Fine hound, swallow marked, and
when he opened on a scent you could always tell what
it was that he was running. I never allowed him
to run with packs, but generally used him in treeing
coon, which pestered the cornfields during roasting-ear
season and in the fall. Well, after I had been
out in Texas about five years, I concluded to go back
on a little visit to the old folks. There were
no railroads within twenty miles of my home, and I
had to hoof it that distance, so I arrived after dark.
Of course my return was a great surprise to my folks,
and we sat up late telling stories about things out
West. I had worked with cattle all the time,
and had made one trip over the trail from Collin County
to Abilene, Kansas.
“My folks questioned me so fast
that they gave me no show to make any inquiries in
return, but I finally eased one in and asked about
my dog Keiser, and was tickled to hear that he was
still living. I went out and called him, but
he failed to show up, when mother explained his absence
by saying that he often went out hunting alone now,
since there was none of us boys at home to hunt with
him. They told me that he was no account any longer;
that he had grown old and gray, and father said he
was too slow on trail to be of any use. I noticed
that it was a nice damp night, and if my old dog had
been there, I think I’d have taken a circle
around the fields in the hope of hearing him sing once
more. Well, we went back into the house, and after
talking awhile longer, I climbed into the loft and
went to bed. I didn’t sleep very sound
that night, and awakened several times. About
an hour before daybreak, I awoke suddenly and imagined
I heard a hound baying faintly in the distance.
Finally I got up and opened the board window in the
gable and listened. Say, boys, I knew that hound’s
baying as well as I know my own saddle. It was
old Keiser, and he had something treed about a mile
from the house, across a ridge over in some slashes.
I slipped on my clothes, crept downstairs, and taking
my old man’s rifle out of the rack, started
to him.
“It was as dark as a stack of
black cats, but I knew every path and byway by heart.
I followed the fields as far as I could, and later,
taking into the timber, I had to go around a long swamp.
An old beaver dam had once crossed the outlet of this
marsh, and once I gained it, I gave a long yell to
let the dog know that some one was coming. He
answered me, and quite a little while before day broke
I reached him. Did he know me? Why, he knew
me as easy as the little boy knew his pap. Right
now, I can’t remember any simple thing in my
whole life that moved me just as that little reunion
of me and my dog, there in those woods that morning.
Why, he howled with delight. He licked my face
and hands and stood up on me with his wet feet and
said just as plain as he could that he was glad to
see me again. And I was glad to meet him, even
though he did make me feel as mellow as a girl over
a baby.
“Well, when daybreak came, I
shot a nice big fat Mr. Zip Coon out of an old pin-oak,
and we started for home like old pardners. Old
as he was, he played like a puppy around me, and when
we came in sight of the house, he ran on ahead and
told the folks what he had found. Yes, you bet
he told them. He came near clawing all the clothing
off them in his delight. That’s one reason
I always like a dog and a poor man—you
can’t question their friendship.”
A circus was in progress on the other
side of the wagon. From a large rock, Jake Blair
was announcing the various acts and introducing the
actors and actresses. Runt Pickett, wearing a
skirt made out of a blanket and belted with a hobble,
won the admiration of all as the only living lady
lion-tamer. Resuming comfortable positions on
our side of the commissary, a lad named Waterwall,
one of Sponsilier’s boys, took up the broken
thread where Forrest’s wrangler had left off.
“The greatest dog-man I ever
knew,” said he, “lived on the Guadalupe
River. His name was Dave Hapfinger, and he had
the loveliest vagabond temperament of any man I ever
saw. It mattered nothing what he was doing, all
you had to do was to give old Dave a hint that you
knew where there was fish to be caught, or a bee-course
to hunt, and he would stop the plow and go with you
for a week if necessary. He loved hounds better
than any man I ever knew. You couldn’t
confer greater favor than to give him a promising
hound pup, or, seeking the same, ask for one of his
raising. And he was such a good fellow. If
any one was sick in the neighborhood, Uncle Dave always
had time to kill them a squirrel every day; and he
could make a broth for a baby, or fry a young squirrel,
in a manner that would make a sick man’s mouth
water.
“When I was a boy, I’ve
laid around many a camp-fire this way and listened
to old Dave tell stories. He was quite a humorist
in his way, and possessed a wonderful memory.
He could tell you the day of the month, thirty years
before, when he went to mill one time and found a
peculiar bird’s nest on the way. Colonel
Andrews, owner of several large plantations, didn’t
like Dave, and threatened to prosecute him once for
cutting a bee-tree on his land. If the evidence
had been strong enough, I reckon the Colonel would.
No doubt Uncle Dave was guilty, but mere suspicion
isn’t sufficient proof.
“Colonel Andrews was a haughty
old fellow, blue-blooded and proud as a peacock, and
about the only way Dave could get even with him was
in his own mild, humorous way. One day at dinner
at a neighboring log-rolling, when all danger of prosecution
for cutting the bee-tree had passed, Uncle Dave told
of a recent dream of his, a pure invention. ‘I
dreamt,’ said he, ’that Colonel Andrews
died and went to heaven. There was an unusually
big commotion at St. Peter’s gate on his arrival.
A troop of angels greeted him, still the Colonel seemed
displeased at his reception. But the welcoming
hosts humored him forward, and on nearing the throne,
the Almighty, recognizing the distinguished arrival,
vacated the throne and came down to greet the Colonel
personally. At this mark of appreciation, he relaxed
a trifle, and when the Almighty insisted that he should
take the throne seat, Colonel Andrews actually smiled
for the first time on earth or in heaven.’
“Uncle Dave told this story
so often that he actually believed it himself.
But finally a wag friend of Colonel Andrews told of
a dream which he had had about old Dave, which the
latter hugely enjoyed. According to this second
vagary, the old vagabond had also died and gone to
heaven. There was some trouble at St. Peter’s
gate, as they refused to admit dogs, and Uncle Dave
always had a troop of hounds at his heels. When
he found that it was useless to argue the matter,
he finally yielded the point and left the pack outside.
Once inside the gate he stopped, bewildered at the
scene before him. But after waiting inside some
little time unnoticed, he turned and was on the point
of asking the gate-keeper to let him out, when an
angel approached and asked him to stay. There
was some doubt in Dave’s mind if he would like
the place, but the messenger urged that he remain and
at least look the city over. The old hunter goodnaturedly
consented, and as they started up one of the golden
streets Uncle Dave recognized an old friend who had
once given him a hound pup. Excusing himself
to the angel, he rushed over to his former earthly
friend and greeted him with warmth and cordiality.
The two old cronies talked and talked about the things
below, and finally Uncle Dave asked if there was any
hunting up there. The reply was disappointing.
“Meanwhile the angel kept urging
Uncle Dave forward to salute the throne. But
he loitered along, meeting former hunting acquaintances,
and stopping with each for a social chat. When
they finally neared the throne, the patience of the
angel was nearly exhausted; and as old Dave looked
up and saw Colonel Andrews occupying the throne, he
rebelled and refused to salute, when the angel wrathfully
led him back to the gate and kicked him out among
his dogs.”
Jack Splann told a yarn about the
friendship of a pet lamb and dog which he owned when
a boy. It was so unreasonable that he was interrupted
on nearly every assertion. Long before he had
finished, Sponsilier checked his narrative and informed
him that if he insisted on doling out fiction he must
have some consideration for his listeners, and at
least tell it within reason. Splann stopped right
there and refused to conclude his story, though no
one but myself seemed to regret it. I had a true
incident about a dog which I expected to tell, but
the audience had become too critical, and I kept quiet.
As it was evident that no more dog stories would be
told, the conversation was allowed to drift at will.
The recent shooting on the North Platte had been witnessed
by nearly every one present, and was suggestive of
other scenes.
“I have always contended,”
said Dorg Seay, “that the man who can control
his temper always shoots the truest. You take
one of these fellows that can smile and shoot at the
same time—they are the boys that I want
to stand in with. But speaking of losing the
temper, did any of you ever see a woman real angry,—not
merely cross, but the tigress in her raging and thirsting
to tear you limb from limb? I did only once,
but I have never forgotten the occasion. In supreme
anger the only superior to this woman I ever witnessed
was Captain Cartwright when he shot the slayer of his
only son. He was as cool as a cucumber, as his
only shot proved, but years afterward when he told
me of the incident, he lost all control of himself,
and fire flashed from his eyes like from the muzzle
of a six-shooter. ‘Dorg,’ said he,
unconsciously shaking me like a terrier does a rat,
his blazing eyes not a foot from my face, ’Dorg,
when I shot that cowardly —– ——
—– —–, I didn’t
miss the centre of his forehead the width of my thumb
nail.’
“But this woman defied a throng
of men. Quite a few of the crowd had assisted
the night before in lynching her husband, and this
meeting occurred at the burying-ground the next afternoon.
The woman’s husband was a well-known horse-thief,
a dissolute, dangerous character, and had been warned
to leave the community. He lived in a little
village, and after darkness the evening before, had
crept up to a window and shot a man sitting at the
supper-table with his family. The murderer had
harbored a grudge against his victim, had made threats,
and before he could escape, was caught red-handed
with the freshly fired pistol in his hand. The
evidence of guilt was beyond question, and a vigilance
committee didn’t waste any time in hanging him
to the nearest tree.
“The burying took place the
next afternoon. The murdered man was a popular
citizen, and the village and country turned out to
pay their last respects. But when the services
were over, a number of us lingered behind, as it was
understood that the slayer as well as his victim would
be interred in the same grounds. A second grave
had been prepared, and within an hour a wagon containing
a woman, three small children, and several Mexicans
drove up to the rear side of the inclosure. There
was no mistaking the party, the coffin was carried
in to the open grave, when every one present went
over to offer friendly services. But as we neared
the little group the woman picked up a shovel and
charged on us like a tigress. I never saw such
an expression of mingled anger and anguish in a human
countenance as was pictured in that woman’s
face. We shrank from her as if she had been a
lioness, and when at last she found her tongue, every
word cut like a lash. Livid with rage, the spittle
frothing from her mouth, she drove us away, saying:
“’Oh, you fiends of hell,
when did I ask your help? Like the curs you are,
you would lick up the blood of your victim! Had
you been friends to me or mine, why did you not raise
your voice in protest when they were strangling the
life out of the father of my children? Away,
you cowardly hounds! I’ve hired a few Mexicans
to help me, and I want none of your sympathy in this
hour. Was it your hand that cut him down from
the tree this morning, and if it was not, why do I
need you now? Is my shame not enough in your
eyes but that you must taunt me further? Do my
innocent children want to look upon the faces of those
who robbed them of a father? If there is a spark
of manhood left in one of you, show it by leaving
me alone! And you other scum, never fear but that
you will clutter hell in reward for last night’s
work. Begone, and leave me with my dead!’”
The circus had ended. The lateness
of the hour was unobserved by any one until John Levering
asked me if he should bring in my horse. It lacked
less than half an hour until the guards should change,
and it was high time our outfit was riding for camp.
The innate modesty of my wrangler, in calling attention
to the time, was not forgotten, but instead of permitting
him to turn servant, I asked him to help our cook
look after his utensils. On my return to the
wagon, Parent was trying to quiet a nervous horse
so as to allow him to carry the Dutch oven returning.
But as Levering was in the act of handing up the heavy
oven, one of Forrest’s men, hoping to make the
animal buck, attempted to place a briar stem under
the horse’s tail. Sponsilier detected the
movement in time to stop it, and turning to the culprit,
said: “None of that, my bully boy.
I have no objection to killing a cheap cow-hand, but
these cooks have won me, hands down. If ever
I run across a girl who can make as good pies as we
had for supper, she can win the affections of my young
and trusting heart.”