Water! Water!
“Bring on your herds,”
said Joel, addressing a quartette of trail foremen
resting under the sunshade. “Our water is
holding out better than we expected. The Lovell
cattle only lowered the ponds a trifle. From
the present outlook, we can water the drive.”
“That’s a big contract,”
reluctantly admitted a “Running W” trail
boss. “I had word on the railroad yesterday
that the Arkansaw River at Dodge was only running
at night.”
“Water is reported plentiful
around Ogalalla and beyond,” doggedly said a
pock-marked foreman.
“That’ll tempt the herds
to cross over,” urged the Running W man.
“The faraway hills are always green.”
The conversation took a new tack.
“Who knows the estimate on the total drive this
year?” inquired a swarthy, sun-burned little
man, addressing the pock-marked foreman.
“A rough estimate places the
drive at six hundred and fifty thousand head,”
came the languid reply.
“There you are,” smilingly
said the Running W boss, turning to Joel. “Better
revise your water estimate.”
“Not now,” answered Joel,
meeting smile with smile. “Later on I may
have to hedge, but for the present, bring on your
cattle.”
“That’s to the point,”
languidly said a tall, blond Texan, arising. “My
cattle must have water this evening.”
The other trail foremen arose.
“We all understand,” remarked the pock-marked
man to the others, “that this is the place where
we drop our strays, fagged and crippled stuff.
These are the boys that Mr. Lovell mentioned as worthy
of any cattle that must be abandoned.”
“At Wells Brothers’ ranch,
on the Beaver,” assentingly said the little
man.
“Our lead herds will not have
many cripples,” said the Running W foreman,
turning to the boys. “A few days’
rest is everything to a tender-footed steer, and what
cattle the lead ones drop, the rear ones have orders
to bring through to you.”
“Thank you, sir,” said
Joel frankly. “We want to stock our range,
and crippled cattle are as good as gold to us.”
Spurs clanked as the men turned to
their mounts. The boys followed, and Dell overtook
the blond Texan. “If you need a hand on
the drag end of your herd,” said the boy to
the tall foreman, “I’ll get up a fresh
horse and overtake you.”
“Make it a horse apiece,”
said the young man, “and I’ll sign your
petition for the post office—when this country
has one. I’m as good as afoot.”
The other foremen mounted their horses.
“I’ll overtake you,” said Joel to
the trio, “as soon as I change mounts. Whoever
has the lead herd, come in on the water above the
field. The upper pools are the deepest, and let
your cattle cover the water evenly.”
“I’m in the lead,”
said the pock-marked man. “But we’ll
have to come up to the water in trailing formation.
The cattle have suffered from thirst, and they break
into a run at sight of water, if grazed up to it.
You may take one point and I’ll take the other.”
The existing drouth promised a good
schooling for the brothers. Among the old philosophies,
contact was said to be educational. Wells Brothers
were being thrown in contact with the most practical
men that the occupation, in all pastoral ages, had
produced. The novelty of trailing cattle vast
distances had its origin with the Texans. Bred
to the calling, they were masters of the craft.
In the hands of an adept outfit of a dozen men, a
trail herd of three thousand beeves had all the mobility
of a brigade of cavalry. The crack of a whip was
unheard on the trail. A whispered order, followed
by a signal to the men, and the herd turned, grazed
to its contentment, fell into column formation, and
took up its march—a peaceful march that
few armies have equaled. Contact with these men,
the rank and file of that splendid cavalry which once
patrolled the range industry of the West, was priceless
to the boys.
The lead herd reached the Beaver valley
at noon. When within a mile of the water, the
point men gave way to the foremen and Joel Wells.
But instead of dropping back, the dust-covered men
rode on into the lead, the action being seemingly
understood by every one except the new hand on the
point. Joel was alert, felt the massive column
of beeves yield to his slightest pressure, as a ship
to the hand of the helmsman, as he veered the leaders
out of the broken trails and guided the herd around
the field to the upper pools. On nearing the water,
the deposed point men deployed nearer the lead, when
the object of their position explained itself.
On sighting the ponds, the leaders broke into a run,
but the four horsemen at hand checked the excited dash,
and the herd was led up to the water in column formation.
It was the mastery of man over the creature.
The herds arrived in hit-and-miss
class. The destination of the pock-marked foreman’s
beeves was an army post in Dakota. The swarthy
little man followed with a herd of cows for delivery
at an Indian agency in Wyoming. The different
Running W herds were under contract to different cattle
companies, in adjoining states and territories.
The tall foreman’s herd was also under contract,
but the point of delivery was at Ogalalla, on the
Platte, where a ranch outfit would receive the cattle.
The latter herd arrived late at evening.
The cattle were driven on speculation, there had been
an oversight in mounting the outfit, and the men,
including the foreman, were as good as afoot.
“This trip lets me out,”
said the young Texan to the brothers, “of walking
up the trail and leading fagged-out saddle stock.
A mount of six horses to the man may be all right
on a ranch, but it won’t do on the trail.
Especially in a dry year, with delivery on the Platte.
Actually, this afternoon is the first time I have
felt a horse under me since we crossed Red River.
Give me a sheet of paper, please. I want to give
you a bill of sale for these six drag ponies that
I’m sawing off on you. I carry written
authority to give a bill of sale, and it will always
protect your possession of the horses. They wouldn’t
bring a dollar a head in Ogalalla, but when they round
into form again next summer, some brand ferret passing
might want to claim them on you. Any cattle that
I cull out here are abandoned, you understand, simply
abandoned.”
The boys were left alone for the first
time in several nights. The rush of the past
few days had kept them in the saddle during their waking
hours. The dead-line had been neglected, the drifting
of cripples to the new tanks below was pressing, and
order must be established. The water in the pools
was the main concern, a thing beyond human control,
and a matter of constant watchfulness. A remark
dropped during the day, of water flowing at night,
was not lost on the attentive ear of Joel Wells.
“What did you mean?” he
politely inquired of the Running W foreman, while
the latter’s herd was watering, “of a river
only running at night?”
“All over this arid country
moisture rises at night and sinks by day,” replied
the trail boss. “Under drouth, these sandy
rivers of the plain, including the Platte and for
a thousand miles to the south, only flow at night.
It’s their protection against the sun’s
absorption. Mark these pools at sunset and see
if they don’t rise an inch to-night. Try
it and see.”
Willow roots were notched on the water-line
of each beaver dam. The extreme upper pool was
still taking water from a sickly flow, a struggling
rivulet, fed by the springs at its head. Doubt
was indulged in and freely expressed.
“If the water only holds a week
longer,” ventured Dell, sleepless in his blankets,
“it’ll double our holding of cattle.”
“It’ll hold a month,”
said Joel, equally sleepless. “We’ve
got to stand by these trail herds—there
is no other water short of the Republican. I’ve
figured it all out. When the Beaver ponds are
gone, we’ll round up the wintered cattle, drift
them over to the south fork of the Republican, and
get some one to hold them until frost falls. Then
we’ll ship the cripples up to Hackberry Grove,
and that will free the new tanks—water
enough for twenty trail herds. We have the horses,
and these trail outfits will lend us any help we need.
By shifting cattle around, I can see a month’s
supply. And there may be something in water rising
at night. We’ll know in the morning.”
Sleep blotted out the night.
Dawn revealed the fact that the trail foreman knew
the secrets of the plain. “That trail boss
knew,” shouted Joel, rushing into the tent and
awakening Dell. “The water rose in every
pool. The lower one gained an inch and the upper
one gained two. The creek is running freely.
The water must be rising out of the ground. Let
those Texans bring on their herds. We have oceans
of water!”
The cattle came. The first week
thirty herds passed the new ranch. It took riding.
The dead-line was held, the flotsam cared for, and
a hand was ever ready to point a herd or nurse the
drag end. Open house was maintained. Every
arriving foreman was tendered a horse, and left his
benediction on the Beaver.
The ranch proved a haven to man and
beast. One of the first foremen to arrive during
the second week was Nat Straw. He drove up at
sunset, with a chuck-wagon, halted at the tent, and
in his usual easy manner inquired, “Where is
the matron of this hospital?”
“Here she is,” answered
Dell, recognizing the man and surmising the situation.
“One of your men hurt?”
“Not seriously,” answered
Straw, looking back into the wagon. “Just
a little touch of the dengue. He’s been
drinking stagnant water, out of cow tracks, for the
last few months, and that gets into the bones of the
best of us. I’m not feeling very well myself.”
Dell lifted the wagon-sheet and peered
inside. “Let’s get the poor fellow
into the tent,” urged the boy. “Can
he walk, or can you and I carry him?”
“He’s the long size Texan,
and we’d better try and trail him in,”
answered Straw, alighting from the wagon. “Where’s
Dr. Joel Wells?”
“Riding the dead-line.
He’ll be in shortly. I’ll fix a cot,
and we’ll bring the sick man in at once.”
It was simple malaria, known in the
Southwest as dengue fever. The unfortunate lad
was made comfortable, and on Joel riding in, Straw
had skirmished some corn, and was feeding his mules.
“As one of the founders of this
hospital,” said Straw, after greeting Joel,
“this corn has my approval. It is my orders,
as one of the trustees, that it be kept in stock hereafter.
This team has to go back to the Prairie Dog to-night,
and this corn will fortify them for the trip.”
The situation was explained.
“I only lost half a day,” continued Straw,
“by bringing the poor fellow over to you.
He’s one of the best men that ever worked for
me, and a month’s rest will put him on his feet
again. Now, if one of you boys will take the
team back to—”
“Certainly,” answered
Joel. “Anything a director of this hospital
wants done—We’re running a relief
station now—watering the entire drive this
year. Where’s your outfit camped?”
“A mile above the trail crossing
on the Prairie Dog. The wagon’s empty.
Leave here at two o’clock to-night, and you’ll
get there in time for breakfast.”
“I’m your man. Going
to the Prairie Dog at night, in the summer, is a horse
that’s easy curried.”
The next evening Joel brought in Straw’s
herd. In the mean time the sick man had been
cared for, and the passing wayfarer and his cattle
made welcome and sped on their way. During the
lay-over, Straw had lost his place in the overland
march, two herds having passed him and crossed the
Beaver.
“I’m corporal here to-day,”
said Straw to the two foremen, who arrived together
in advance. “On this water, I’m the
squatter that’ll rob you right. You’ll
count your cattle to me and pay the bill in advance.
This cool, shaded water in the Beaver is worth three
cents a head, and I’ll count you down to a toddling
calf and your wagon mules. Your drafts are refused
honor at the Beaver banks—nothing but the
long green passes currency here. You varmints
must show some regrets for taking advantage of a widow
woman. I’ll make you sorry for passing me.”
“How I love to hear old Nat
rattle his little song,” said one of the foremen,
shaking hands with Dell. “Remember the night
you slept with me? How’s the black cow
I gave you last summer?”
Dell fairly clung to the grasped hand.
“Pressnell’s foreman!” said he,
recalling both man and incident. “The cow
has a roan calf. Sit down. Will you need
a fresh horse to-day? Do you like lettuce?”
“I reckon, Nat,” said
the other foreman, an hour later, as the two mounted
loaned horses, “I reckon your big talk goes up
in smoke. You’re not the only director
in this cattle company. Dell, ransack both our
wagons to-day, and see if you can’t unearth some
dainties for this sick lad. No use looking in
Straw’s commissary; he never has anything to
eat; Injuns won’t go near his wagon.”
Straw spent a second night with the
sick man. On leaving in the morning, he took
the feverish hand of the lad and said: “Now,
Jack, make yourself right at home. These boys
have been tried before, and they’re our people.
I’m leaving you a saddle and a horse, and when
you get on your feet, take your own bearings.
You can always count on a job with me, and I’ll
see that you draw wages until my outfit is relieved.
This fever will burn itself out in a week or ten days.
I’ll keep an eye over you until you are well.
S’long, Jack.”
The second week fell short only two
herds of the previous one. There were fully as
many cattle passed, and under the heat of advancing
summer the pools suffered a thirsty levy. The
resources of the ponds were a constant source of surprise,
as an occasional heavy beef caved a foot into an old
beaver warren, which poured its contents into the pools.
At the end of the first fortnight, after watering
fifty-eight herds, nearly half the original quantity
of water was still in reserve.
A third week passed. There was
a decided falling off in the arrival of herds, only
twenty-two crossing the Beaver. The water reserves
suffered freely, more from the sun’s absorption
than from cattle, until the supply became a matter
of the most serious concern. The pools would not
have averaged a foot in depth, the flow from the springs
was a mere trickle, the beaver burrows sounded empty
to a horse’s footbeat, and there must be some
limit to the amount the parched soil would yield.
The brothers found apt counsel in
their guest. By the end of the second week, the
fever had run its course, and the sick man, Jack Sargent,
was up and observant of the situation. True to
his calling, he felt for the cattle, and knew the
importance of water on the Beaver to the passing drive.
“You must rest these beaver
ponds,” said Jack, in meeting the emergency.
“Every time these pools lower an inch, it gives
the sun an advantage. It’s absorption that’s
swallowing up the ponds. You must deepen these
pools, which will keep the water cooler. Rest
these ponds a few days, or only water late at night.
You have water for weeks yet, but don’t let
the sun rob you. These ponds are living springs
compared to some of the water we used south of Red
River. Meet the herds on the divide, and pilot
the early ones to the tanks below, and the late ones
in here. Shifting in your saddle rests a horse,
and a little shifting will save your water.”
The advice was acted on. While
convalescent, Sargent was installed as host on the
Beaver, and the brothers took to their saddles.
The majority of the herds were met on the Prairie
Dog, and after a consultation with the foremen their
cattle were started so as to reach the tanks by day
or the ranch at evening. The month rounded out
with the arrival of eighteen herds, only six of which
touched at headquarters, and the fourth week saw a
distinct gain in the water supply at the beaver dams.
The boys barely touched at home, to change horses,
living with the trail wagons, piloting in herds, rich
in the reward of relieving the wayfaring, and content
with the crumbs that fell to their range.
The drouth of 1886 left a gruesome
record in the pastoral history of the West. The
southern end of the Texas and Montana cattle trail
was marked by the bones of forty thousand cattle that
fell, due to the want of water, during the months
of travail on that long march. Some of this loss
was due to man’s inhumanity to the cattle of
the fields, in withholding water, but no such charge
rested on the owners of the little ranch on the Beaver.
A short month witnessed the beginning
of the end of the year’s drive. Only such
herds as were compelled to, and those that had strength
in reserve, dared the plain between the Arkansas and
Platte Rivers. The fifth week only six herds
arrived, all of which touched at the ranch; half of
them had been purchased at Dodge, had neither a cripple
nor a stray to bestow, but shared the welcome water
and passed on.
One of the purchased herds brought
a welcome letter to Joel. It was from Don Lovell,
urgently accenting anew his previous invitation to
come to Dodge and look over the market.
“After an absence of several
weeks,” wrote Mr. Lovell, “I have returned
to Dodge. From a buyer’s standpoint, the
market is inviting. The boom prices which prevailed
in ’84 are cut in half. Any investment in
cattle now is perfectly safe.
“I have ordered three of my
outfits to return here. They will pass your ranch.
Fall in with the first one that comes along. Bring
a mount of horses, and report to me on arriving.
Fully half this year’s drive is here, unsold.
Be sure and come.”
“Are you going?” inquired Dell on reading
the letter.
“I am,” answered Joel with emphasis.
“That’s the talk,”
said Sargent. “Whenever cattle get so cheap
that no other man will look a cow in the face, that’s
the time to buy her. Folks are like sheep; the
Bible says so; they all want to buy or all want to
sell. I only know Mr. Lovell from what you boys
have told me; but by ordering three outfits to return
to Dodge, I can see that he’s going to take
advantage of that market and buy about ten thousand
cattle. You’ve got the range. Buy this
summer. I’ll stay with Dell until you return.
Buy a whole herd of steers, and I’ll help you
hold them this winter.”
The scene shifted. Instead of
looking to the south for a dust cloud, the slopes
of the north were scanned for an approaching cavalcade.
The last week admitted of taking an account of the
cattle dropped at the new ranch. From the conserves
of its owners, one hundred and four herds had watered,
over three hundred thousand cattle, the sweepings of
which amounted to a few over eleven hundred head,
fully fifty of which, exhausted beyond recovery, died
after reaching their new range.
By the end of July, only an occasional
herd was arriving. August was ushered in with
the appearance of Bob Quirk, one of the division foremen,
on the upper march. He arrived early in the morning,
in advance of his outfit barely an hour, and inquired
for Joel. Dell answered for the brothers, the
older one and Sargent being above at Hackberry Grove.
“I have orders to bring him
to Dodge,” said Quirk, dismounting. “Make
haste and bring in the remuda. We’ll cut
him out a mount of six horses and throw them in with
mine. Joel can follow on the seventh. My
outfit will barely touch here in passing. We’re
due to receive cattle in Dodge on the 5th, and time
is precious. Joel can overtake us before night.
Make haste.”