by Zane Grey
Dick lay unconscious on the floor with a bloody forehead. Pan sat crouched on the platform, haggard and sullen, with face, shirt, hands all bloody.
“Ah-uh! Reckon you’ve been fightin’ like a cowboy for shore this time,” said Pan’s father in his matter of fact way. “Stand up. Let’s look at you.… Jim, take a look at that lad on the floor.”
While Pan painfully endeavored to get up, Blake knelt beside Dick.
“Bill, this heah rooster has had a wallop,” said Blake.
“You little cowpunchin’ ruffian,” exploded Smith angrily, reaching a large arm for Pan. “Now then.… What the hell?… Boy, you’ve been stabbed!”
“Yes—Dad—he stuck me—with teacher’s knife,” replied Pan faintly. He tottered on his feet, and his right hand was pressed tight to his left shoulder, high up, where the broken haft of the paper knife showed between his red-stained fingers.
Bill Smith’s anger vanished in alarm, and something stern and grim took its place. Just then Lucy broke away from the teacher and confronted him.
“Oh—please don’t punish him, Mr. Smith,” she burst out poignantly. “It was all my fault. I—I stuck up my nose at Dick. He said things that—that weren’t nice.… I slapped him. Then he grabbed me, kissed me.… I ran to Pan—and—and told him.… Oh, that made Pan fight.”
Smith looked gravely down into the white little face with the distended violet eyes, slowly losing their passion. He seemed to be struck with something that he had never seen before.
“Wal, Lucy, I’ll not punish Pan,” he said, slowly. “I think more of him for fightin’ for you.”
CHAPTER FOUR
They did not meet again during the winter. It was a hard winter. Pan left school and stayed close to home, working for his mother, and playing less than any time before.
“I heard Dick say he’d kill you someday,” said one cowboy seriously. “An’ take it from me, kid, he’s a bad hombre.”
“Ah-uh!” was all the reply Pan vouchsafed, as he walked away. He did not like to be reminded of Dick. It sent an electric spark to the deep-seated smoldering mine in his breast.
When springtime came Pan joined the roundup in earnest, for part of the cattle and outfit now belonged to his father. Out on the range the forty riders waited for the wagons. There were five cowboys from Big Sandy in Pan’s bunch and several more arrived from the Crow Roost country. Old Dutch John, a famous range character, was driving the chuck wagon. At one time he had been a crony of Pan’s father, and that attracted Pan to the profane old grizzled cook. He could not talk without swearing and, if he replied to a question that needed only yes or no, he would supplement it with a string of oaths.
Next day the outfit rode the west side of Dobe Creek, rounding up perhaps a thousand cattle. Pete Blaine and Hookey roped calves while Pan helped hold up.
On the following day the riders circled Blue Lakes, where cattle swarmed. Old John had yelled to the boys: “Hey, punchers, heave at them today. You gotta throw an awful mess of ’em heah.”
These two lakes were always dry, except during the spring; and now they were full, with green grass blanketing the range as far as eye could see. By Monday long lines of cattle moved with flying dust down to the spot chosen for the roundup. As the herds closed in, the green range itself seemed to be moving. When thrown together all these cattle formed a sea of red and white, from which roared an incessant bawling. It looked impossible to separate cows and calves from the others. But dozens of fearless cowboys, riding in here and in there, soon began to cut out the cows and calves.
It was a spectacle that inspired Pan as never before. The wagons were lined up near the lake, their big white canvas tops shining in the afternoon sun, and higher on a bench stood the “hoodelum” or bed wagon, so stocked with bedrolls that it resembled a haystack. Beyond the margin of the lake, four hundred fine saddle horses grazed and kicked and bit at one another. Beyond the saddle horses grazed the day herd of cattle. And over on the other side dinned the melee over the main herd, the incessant riding, yelling of the cowboys and the bawling of the cows.
When all the cows and calves were cut out, a rider of each outfit owning cattle on that range would go through to claim those belonging to his brand. Next the herd of bulls and steers, old cows and yearlings, would be driven back out upon the range.
Fires were started, and as there was no wood on that range, buffalo chips were used instead. It took many cowboys to collect sufficient for their needs.
At sunset, when the branding of calves was finished, each cowboy caught a horse for night duty. Pan got one he called Old Paint.
“Say, kid,” called one of the Crow Nest cowboys, “ain’t you tyin’ up a pretty fancy hoss fer night work?”
“Oh, I guess not,” laughed Pan.
“Come heah, Blowy,” called the cowboy to another. “See what I found.”
A long lanky red-faced rider detached himself from the others, and strode with jingling spurs over to look at Pan’s horse.
“Wal, I’ll go to hell, Ben Bolt, if it ain’t ol’ Calico!” he ejaculated, in amaze and pleasure. “Kid, whar’d you ever git him?”
“Dad made a trade,” replied Pan.
“Kid, look a heah. Don’t ever tie that hoss to a stake pin. He’s the best cow hoss I ever slung a leg over. The puncher who broke him an’ reached him all he knows was my pard, long ago. An’ he’s daid. Kid, he’d roll over in his grave if he knowed ol’ Cal was tied to a picket pin.”
“Aw, is that so?” replied Pan. “Fact is, I don’t know much about him. We called him Old Paint. Haven’t forked him yet. Dad got him from a lady last winter. She was trying to work him to a cart. But he balked. She said she poured some hot water on.…”
“Lady, hell!” shouted the cowboy, growing redder of face. “She wasn’t no lady if she treated that grand hoss that way.… See heah, kid, I’ll stake you to a good night hoss. Turn Ol’ Cal loose, an’ whenever you need to do some real fancy separatin’ jest set your frusky on ol’ Cal. Better tie to your stirrups if you’re perticler aboot keepin’ your seat, ’cause ’at ol’ pony can sure git from under a cowhand.”
“All right, I’ll turn Old Calico loose,” replied Pan. “And I’ll remember what you said about him.”
Blowy pointed out one of his horses. “Kid, screw your wood to thet Jasper, an’ you’ll never be walkin’.”
“Thanks, but I got lots of horses,” said Pan.
“Aw go on—lots of horses. Why bunkie, I got more mean horses than I can start to keep gentle. I just fetched thet one to stake my friends.”
Pan saddled up the horse indicated, and found him the best he had ever mounted. That experience led to his acquaintance with Blowy. He was a ceaseless talker, hence his name, but beloved by all the outfit. Pan learned something from every cowboy he met and it was not all for the best.
That roundup was Pan’s real introduction to the raw range. When the time came for the outfit to break up, with each unit taking its own cattle, the boss said to Pan, “Come ride fer me.”
Pan, flushed and pleased, mumbled his thanks, but he had to work for his father. Then he and the boy with him, Joe Crawley, bade their comrades good-by, especially loath to part with Old Dutch, and started home with their cows and calves. They crossed the old Indian battlefield where Colonel Shivington gave the famous order to his soldiers: “Kill ’em all. Nits make lice!”
Pan and Joe set out from there for Limestone Creek with their small herd and extra horses. Pan wanted to bring Old Calico, but he had drifted off to the range.
“Heel flies are workin’, kid,” said Joe, who was older and more experienced. “We’re shore goin’ to be on the mud fer the next month.”
There was something in the air, storm perhaps, or such conditions that have strange effect upon beasts. Pan and Joe fought their cattle and horses all that day, and most of the night. They could not make them travel. Halting where they were they kept guard till dawn, then tried to drive their outfit on. But not for several
hours could they move them. At length, however, the stock began to get dry, and string out and travel.
Late in the afternoon the boys reached Limestone. They found three old cows stuck in the mud, up to their eyes, with only their horns and faces showing. It took long hard work to get them out. They made camp there, turning the cows and calves loose, as this was their range.
The following morning Pan and Joe rode up to the next boghole. They found seventeen mired cattle.
“Nice an’ deep,” said Joe. “Damn these heah cows, allus pickin’ out quicksand!”
It took until noon to pull them out. Another boghole showed twenty-four more in deep.
“How many more bogholes on Limestone?” asked Pan.
“Only four an’ the wust ones,” replied Joe, groaning. “If they’re boggin’ as good up there in them big holes, your dad will sure have to ship more cattle in soon.”
There were six thousand cattle watering along that stream. When the water was low, as it was then, the cattle mired by the hundreds.
“Looks bad, Pan,” remarked the older cowboy. “We’re goin’ to need help.”
They returned to camp, got their supper, took fresh horses, and worked half the night pulling cows out of the mud.
By sunrise the next morning the boys were at work again. Some of the mired cattle had died, others had kinks in their necks and had to be killed. Farther up the creek conditions grew worse, and the biggest pool on the range looked from a distance like a small lake dotted with ducks.
“I’m cussin’ the world by sections,” growled Joe. “Wal, kid, you g’on up the crick, and get as near a count as you can. I’m ridin’ in after men an’ wagons. We’ll move the camp up heah. It’s the wust I ever seen, an’ we’ll lose a heap of stock. There’s a loblolly of blue gumbo mud an’ no bottom. An’ by thunder we’re stuck heah for Lord knows how long.”
That fall Jim Blake sold his farm, and took his family to New Mexico. He had not been prospering in the valley, and things had gone from bad to worse. Pan did not get home in time to say good-by to Lucy—something that hurt in an indefinable way. He had not forgotten Lucy for in his mind she had become a steadfast factor in his home life. She left a little note of farewell, simple and loyal, hopeful, yet somehow stultified. Not so childish as former notes! Time flew by and Lucy might be growing up.
The Hardmans had also moved away from the valley, where, none of the neighbors appeared to know. But Pan was assured of two facts concerning them; firstly that Dick had gotten into a serious shooting scrape in which he had wounded a rancher’s son, and secondly that from some unexpected and unknown source the Hardmans had acquired or been left some money.
Pan promptly forgot his boyhood enemy. This winter was the last that he spent at home. He rode the Limestone range that summer, and according to cowboys’ gossip was fast developing all the qualities that pertained to the best riders of the day.
Upon returning home he found that his father had made unwise deals and was not getting along very well. Grasping settlers had closed in on the range. Rustlers had ridden down from the north, raiding the valley. During Pan’s absence a little sister was born, which was indeed joyful news for him. And as he played with the baby he was reminded of Lucy. What had become of her? It occurred to Pan that sooner or later he must hunt her up.
Pan decided that he could not remain idle during the winter. He could have had plenty to do at home, working without wages, but that was no longer to be thought of. So he decided to join two other adventurous cowboys who had planned to go south, and in the spring come back with some of the great herds being driven north.
But Pan liked the vast ranges of the Lone Star State, and he rode there for two years, inevitably drifting into the wild free life of the cowboys. Sometimes he sent money home to his mother, but that was seldom, because he was always in debt. She wrote him regularly, which fact was the only link between him and the old home memories. Thought of Lucy returned now and then, on the lonely rides on night watches, and it seemed like a sweet melancholy dream. Never a word did he hear of her.
Spring had come again when he rode into the Panhandle, and as luck would have it he fell in with an outfit who were driving cattle to Montana, a job that would take until late fall. To his chagrin stories of his wildness had preceded him. Ill rumor travels swiftly. Pan was the more liked and respected by these riders. But he feared that gossip of the southern ranges would reach his mother. He would go home that fall to reassure her of his well-being, and that he was not one of those “bad, gun-throwing cowboys.”
But late fall found him cheated of his long summer’s wages, without money and job. He would not ride a “grub line” home, so he found a place with a rancher in Montana. He learned to hate the bleak ranges of that northern state, the piercing blasts of wind, the ice and snow. Spring saw him riding south toward his old stamping grounds. But always he was drifting, with the swift months flying by as fleet as the mustangs he rode, and he did not reach home. The Cimarron, the Platte, the Arkansas ranges came to know the tracks of his horses; and after he had drifted on, to remember him as few cowboys were remembered.
At twenty years of age Panhandle Smith looked older—looked the hard life, the hard fare, the hard companionship that had been his lot as an American cowboy. He had absorbed all the virtues of that remarkable character, and most of the vices. But he had always kept aloof from women. His comrades gave many forceful and humorous reasons for his apparent fear of the sex, but they never understood him. Pan never lost the reverence for women his mother had instilled in him, nor his first and only love for Lucy Blake.
One summer night Pan was standing night-guard duty for his cowboy comrade, who was enamored of the daughter of the rancher for whom they worked. Jim was terribly in love, and closely pressed by a rival from another outfit. This night was to be the crucial one.
Pan had to laugh at his friend. He was funny, he was pathetic, so prone to be cast down one moment and the next raised aloft to the skies, according to the whim of the capricious young lady. Many times Pan had ridden and worked with a boy afflicted with a similar malady.
This night, however, Pan had been conscious of encroaching melancholy. Perhaps it was a yearning for something he did not know how to define.
The night was strange, a sultry oppressive one, silent except for the uneasy lowing of the herd, a rumble of thunder from the dark rolling clouds. A weird yellow moon hung just above the horizon. The range spread away dark, lonely and wild. No wind stirred. The wolves and coyotes were quiet. All at once to Pan the whole world seemed empty. It was an unaccountable feeling. The open range, the solitude, the herd of cattle in his charge, the comrades asleep, the horses grazing round their pickets—these always sufficient things suddenly lost their magic potency. He divined at length that he was homesick. And by the time the lay watch was ended he had determined to quit his job and ride home.
CHAPTER FIVE
On his way home Panhandle Smith rode across the old Limestone range that had been the scene of his first cowboy activities. It had not changed, although the cattle were not so numerous. Familiar as yesterday were the bogholes, where he and his partner—what was that cow-puncher’s name?—had spent so many toilsome days and nights.
Pan made camp on the rocky ford where a brook joined the Limestone. It was thirty miles to Littleton, farther to Las Animas, and his pack horse was tired. He cooked his meager meal, and unrolled his bed, and as on many a hundred other nights he lay down under the open sky. But his wakefulness was new. He could not get to sleep for long. The nearer he got home the stranger and deeper his thoughts.
Moving on next day he kept sharp lookout among the cattle for his father’s brand. But he saw no sign of it. At length, toward sunset, after passing thousands of cattle, he concluded in surprise that his father’s stock no longer ran this range. Too many homesteads and fences! He reached Littleton at dark. It had grown to be a sizable settlement. Pan treated himself to a room at the new hotel, and after supper went ou
t to find somebody he knew. It was Saturday night and the town was full of riders and ranchers. He expected to meet an old acquaintance any moment, but to his further surprise he did not. Finally he went to Campbell’s store, long a fixture in the settlement of that country. John Campbell, huge of build, with his long beard and ruddy face, appeared exactly the same as when he used to give Pan a stick of candy. It did seem a long time, now. Campbell did not recognize him.
“Howdy, stranger, reckon you’ve got the best of me,” he replied to Pan’s question, and he sized up the tall lithe rider with curious and appreciating eyes.
“Now, John, you used to give me a stick of candy, every time I came to town,” said Pan, with a laugh.
“Wal, I done that for every Tom, Dick an’ Harry of a kid in this heah country,” returned the old man, stroking his beard. “But durn if I recollect you.”
“Panhandle Smith,” announced Pan, with just a little diffidence. Perhaps if he was not remembered personally he might have the good luck to be unknown in reputation.
“Wal—Pan, if ’t ain’t you, by gosh!” ejaculated Campbell, cordially, and there was unmistakable welcome in his grip. “But no one here will ever recognize you. Say, you’ve sprung up. We’ve heerd a lot about you—nothin’ of late years, though, now I tax myself… Cowboy, you’ve seen some range life, if talk is true.”
“You mustn’t believe all you hear, Mr. Campbell,” replied Pan, with a smile. “I’d like to know about my dad and mother.”
“Wal, haven’t you heerd?” queried Campbell, hesitatingly.
“What?” flashed Pan, noting the other’s sudden change to gravity. “It’s two years and more since I got a letter from Mother. I wrote a couple of times, but she never answered.”
“You ought to have come home long ago,” said Campbell. “Your father lost his cattle. Old deal with Hardman that stood for years. Mebbe you never knowed about it. There are ranchers around here who swear Hardman drove sharp deals. Wal, your father sold the homestead an’ left. Reckon it’s been over a year.”