Harley was there, rifle in hand. It was a very good rifle, and well cared for.
"Nice bunch," I commented.
"They'll do," he said shortly. "Should have enough to drive."
He moved off to check a big cow that was showing an inclination to move toward the hills. The grazing was good, and they were close to water and showed little inclination to wander off. I could see another rider, Danny Rolf, I believed, on the other side.
It felt good to be back in the saddle, and I was riding my own horse with his easy way of moving. Harley seemed in no mood to talk, so I drifted on around the herd and into the edge of the hills. Yet I rode with care.
As I turned away from the herd to start back toward the ranch, I saw Joe Hinge coming down the slope from the west with a mixed lot of cattle. As they neared me, I drew up and helped guide them toward the main herd. With one or two exceptions they were Spur branded.
Joe pulled up near me, removing his hat to mop his brow. Despite the coolness of the air, he was sweating. And I didn't wonder. "How're you feelin'?" he asked me.
"So, so. Give me another day."
"Sure ... But I can use you." He glanced at me. "You up to working out west?"
"Anytime," I said casually.
I decided against saying anything about a hunch I had.
"Good ... But watch your step."
After a bit I rode back toward the bunkhouse, and unsaddled my horse when I got there. Doing the casual things that a man does all the time gives him time to think, and I was doing some thinking then.
Somebody wanted me dead ... Why?
Another day I slept, loafed, and was irritable with myself for not being back on the job. The following morning I saddled up the bay with the black mane and tail, a short-coupled horse and a good horse from which to rope.
The line cabin was empty but there was a note written on a slab of wood with charcoal:Watch out for Brindle.
Well, I would. I'd no notion of tangling with that one if it could be avoided.
All day I worked the bench and a couple of long, shallow arroyos, and rounded up eight head, then struck a dozen atop the mesa and started them back down toward the ranch.
At noon I was near the line-cabin and rode in to swap horses. Fuentes had just come in. We both switched our saddles, mine to a steeldust that I'd never ridden, and then we went inside for coffee.
Fuentes was quiet. Suddenly he broke his silence. "Balch ... He rode this way. Two, three times I see him. He keeps out of sight."
"Balch himself? Alone?"
"Si."
That was something to study about, for this was in an area where few of his cattle would be found. Those of his we did find we were drifting back down to the holding ground, just like the others. For they could all be separated during the roundup, as was usual.
Puzzles didn't suit me. I'd hired on to handle stock, and I was ready to do just that, but I'd no idea of getting myself killed when I didn't even know what was going on. Balch was a man likely to ride roughshod over anything that got in his way, and Saddler was no better. Roger Balch had a problem with himself, trying to prove to everybody what a tough man he was. The major seemed able to take care of himself. And as for Henry Rossiter ... what could a blind man do?
Rossiter had some loyal hands, and Joe Hinge was a good cattleman.
"Take it easy," Fuentes suggested. "You look tired."
I shrugged. "What the hell? Should I leave it all for you to do?"
When we went outside, Fuentes warned me. "Don't tie onto anything with the steeldust. That's one of the fastest horses on the place, and a good cutting horse but skittish on a rope."
We split up and I turned off toward the southeast, riding right where I'd gotten into trouble. Which shows how much I've got in the way of brains. Yet the pickings were good. I found a half dozen head in the first few minutes, broke them out and started them back. I cut wider and brought in several more, then moved the lot down on the better grass en route to the ranch.
Circling back, I looked for signs. No horse tracks anywhere. Suddenly, I came upon several head of cattle, and had turned them, when I heard a crackling in the brush. The steeldust started nervously and rolled his eyes. Sure enough, it was Ol' Brindle standing there with his head up, looking at me.
I'd no bones to pick with him. In fact, he'd probably saved my bacon there a while back. So I just waved a hand and worked away from him. When I turned to look back, he was still there. He had his head up and he was watching me.
The truth of the matter was that I had a warm feeling for the old boy. He was tough and mean, and someday he might kill a cowhand, even me. But he was wild and free and full of fight, and I liked that. And he had ruled the roost there in his own corner of the country for a long time.
There never was a fiercer animal than a big longhorn who had run wild in the plains or the brush. They'd tackle anything that walked, even a grizzly. Nonetheless, I think most of the riders in that part of the country wanted to get a rope on him. It was a challenge to see him there. A challenge, because you knew when you dabbed a loop on Ol' Brindle you had tied onto a cyclone, and you'd have to win or get smashed up or killed. You give a cowhand a rope and, sooner or later, he'll dab it on anything that's running loose. He'd rope wolves, coyotes, mountain lions and bears ... And I knew of one even roped an eagle.
But as far as I was concerned, Ol' Brindle could make his own way and he'd get no trouble from me ... unless he started it. Which he might.
Topping out on a rise, I pulled up short. Down in the hollow before me, a man with his back to me had roped a steer and was kneeling on its side. His horse looked up at us, ears pricked, but the stranger was too busy with what he was doing to know we were there.
Branding? I saw no fire.
Slowly I walked my horse down the hillside, shucking my Winchester as I went. The steer was dead. The man had cut its throat, and now he was cutting a piece of hide from the hip. And I knew that steer. It was one of those we'd pushed out of the brush the first day I was back.
"Is this a one-man party," I said, "or can anybody get in?"
He turned swiftly, his hand dropping to his gun.
It was Balch.
Chapter 14
His face flushed even redder, then seemed to pale slightly. "Look," he said, "this isn't what you think."
"Take your hand off your gun and we'll talk about it," I said mildly. And very carefully he let go of his gun and lowered his hand.
"Seems to me," I said, "that you've killed one of our steers, on our range. I've seen men hung for less."
The stiffness and harshness had gone out of him. He measured me carefully. "Talon, this looks bad, mighty bad. The worst of it is, itis your steer, and he's wearing my brand."
"Your brand?" I was startled. To tell the truth, I'd seen that steer around and hadn't noted the brand, something a cowhand does naturally as he rides about his business. But this one had been pushed in among other cattle, and somehow I hadn't noticed.
"Oursteer? Wearingyour brand?" I repeated.
"Talon, this brand's two or three years old. And you can believe it or not, but I'm no rustler. I want every cow critter I can latch on to, buthonestly latch on to. I'd steal from no man."
He paused. "Rossiter may believe different, an' you boys, too, but it's a fact. I never stole a beef from any man except for range eating ... which we all do when we're out from home."
He continued. "A couple of years back I saw this steer following one of your cows. Now that'll happen now and again, when a calf loses its ma early and just takes after some cow that happens to be close by. But I paid it no mind until something else showed up a while back. Then I started to get curious, almighty curious."
Balch held out the patch of hide he had cut from the steer's hip. When a brand has been reworked, with another brand burned over it, it may look all right from the outside, but a look at the back side of the hide shows plainly what has been done.
"Been altered, all right," I
agreed. "Ours to yours. There's evidence for a hanging, Balch."
He nodded. "Talon, I'll take an oath I didn't do it, and I'll speak for my boys, too. I'll admit, I've hired on some rough men lately, but the boys I had two years ago--and most of them are still with me--were honest as the day is long."
Balch paused again. "And why should I check the brand on a steer that reads to be mine? Talon, there's something goin' on here. I don't know what it is, or why, but somebody has been misbranding stock. Somebody had branded your cattle to look like mine, and they've done it the other way, too."
Now I didn't like Balch. He was a rough, hard-shouldered man who'd walk right over you if he could, but right now I believed him.
"Looks like somebody might be trying to stir up trouble," I said. "Maybe somebody wants us to fight."
"I thought of that."
"Maybe somebody wants to fall heir to all this range and what cattle are left, somebody who figures he's got a lot of time."
"Maybe ... But who?"
Oddly, at that moment I thought of Lisa. I did not like mysteries or puzzles, not when they concerned my life or my work. And now we had two.
Might they be solved the same way? After all, whowas Lisa? Where was her family? Where was her home?
You'd think, in a big, wide-open land like this, that people wouldn't know each other. But a ranch community is tightly knit and everybody knows everything about each other ... or thinks they do. A stranger is spotted at once, and nobody's quite satisfied until the stranger has been fitted into a place in the scheme of things. Yet nobody knew anything about Lisa.
Which meant two things, at least. Lisa was new to the country, and she lived in some remote place. Who else was there?
The major ... obviously out of the question. He had all he wanted, lived exactly like he wanted, was the most important man in the area, both in his own mind and that of others.
"Take some thinking," I said, after a bit. "Balch, let's keep this under our hats. If you come up with any ideas, let me know."
Suddenly, on an inspiration, I told him how I'd been shot. Of somebody hunting me down. "Why you?" he was puzzled.
"Some of our boys thought it was your outfit. It seems some of the folks around have heard I was good with a gun, and they figure your boys would like to have me out of it."
"No ... I doubt that." He looked up at me. "Talon, my boys aren't afraid of you ... or anybody else. They've offered to brace you, bring matters to a showdown, and I've put my thumb down on it. Talon, if somebody shot at you, it was not one of our bunch."
"All right," I agreed. "You keep your lot and I'll try to keep ours. Meanwhile, let's say nothing and see what develops. When it begins to appear that we aren't going to fight, whoever it is may try something more drastic."
Balch held up his hand. "All right, Talon. I'll ride with that."
He rode out of the hollow and, not being a wasteful man, I stepped down and cut myself a few steaks before turning back to the cabin.
Now I had to talk to Joe Hinge. Fortunately, none of the Stirrup-Iron outfit were trouble hunters. There must be no trouble with Balch and Saddler.
All the way back to the new corral that had been put together in the brush while I was laid up, I thought about the situation. But I came no closer to seeing an answer.
Joe Hinge, Roper, Fuentes and Harley had done some work. Using a wide clearing in some brush, they had fenced in the few openings and had them an easy corral for holding stock, until it could be drifted down to the ranch. It was a rawhide job, but it was all we needed. There were a dozen places the cows might get out if they knew it, but we'd not leave them in there long enough for them to make any discoveries, or even to realize they were penned.
Fuentes showed up with some cattle and we bunched them, and got them into the corral. When we had the bars up on the crude gate, I told him about Balch.
"Say nothing ... not to anybody," I said. "You'll see that steer, anyway, and you should know. Something stinks to high heaven, and I want to know what it is."
He rolled his cigar in his white teeth and gave me an amused look. "You do not think I am a thief, eh? You do not think I steal cows?"
"Well," I said, "I don't know about that. I'm just bettin' you wouldn't steal the cows of a man you worked for." I grinned. "To tell you the truth, I don't think you'd steal any cows. And I don't want you to shoot anybody without reason."
He looked at the end of his cigar. "I think, amigo, you be careful. I think something happen soon. I think maybe these thieves, I think they find out what you know. They try to kill you."
"They've already tried," I said.
We rode back to the cabin and stripped our horses of their gear and went to the line-cabin and washed up. I was putting on my shirt when a horse came over the rise, coming fast. It was ridden by Ann.
Fuentes was standing by the doorjamb with a Winchester. She gave him a quick look. "You all forted up? What's happened?"
"Nothing," I said. "We just don't want it to happen to us."
"Pa wants to see you," she said to me. "You're invited for dinner."
"Sorry," I said. "I've got nothing but my range outfit with me."
"That's all right." She glanced at Tony. "Sorry, he wants to talk to Milo ... confidentially."
Fuentes shrugged. "Both of us could not be away, but if he goes, keep him all night. He is not strong, senorita. He works, but he is still weak. I see it."
"Who's weak?" I blustered. "I can down you anytime!"
He grinned at me. "Perhaps, amigo. Perhaps. But I think the night air on a long ride, I think it not good for you, eh?"
I knew what he was getting at, and he had a point, But I wasn't the only one. "Night air isn't good for you, either," I said. "I'm scared to leave you alone. The boogers might get you."
"Me?" He looked surprised.
"Even you. Boogers get funny ideas. They might think you know as much about them as I do."
"Will you two stop the nonsense?" Ann said impatiently. "You talk like a couple of children."
"He is always the joker, this one." Fuentes said. "Only sometimes does he make the sense."
Luckily, I had a clean shirt in the line-cabin. It took me no time to get into it, and I'd just washed and combed my hair, so we lit out. Fortunately, she wanted to get to the ranch and she was in a hurry. We rode fast and I liked that, because a fast-riding man makes a poor target.
What I'd expected I was not sure, but what I found was certainly unexpected. The major's house was big, white and elegant, with white columns across the front, four of them, and a balcony between the two on each side of the door. There was a porch swing and some chairs, a table, and three steps up to the porch.
For a moment, I hesitated. "Are you sure he wants me in there? And not out at the bunkhouse?"
"I am sure."
We walked in, and the major looked around from the big chair in which he sat, removing his glasses as he did so.
"Come in, come in, son!" He got to his feet. "Sorry I had to send Ann for you, but she had a horse saddled."
"It was a pleasure, sir."
He looked at me again, a puzzled measuring look. He gestured toward a chair opposite his. "Something to drink? A whiskey, perhaps?"
"Sherry, sir. I'd prefer it ... unless you have Madeira."
He looked at me again, then spoke to the elderly Chinese who came in at that moment. "Fong, brandy for me, and Maderia for this gentleman." He glanced at me again. "Any particular kind?"
"Boal or Rainwater ... either will do."
Major Timberly knocked the ashes from his dead pipe and sucked on it thoughtfully. Several times he glanced at me from under his thick brows. Then he began to pack his pipe with tobacco. "I don't quite place you, young man."
"No?"
"You are working cattle for a neighbor, and from what I hear you are known as a man who is good with a gun. Yet you have the manners of a gentleman."
I smiled at him. "Sir, manners do not care who wears them, no mor
e than clothes. Manners can be acquired, clothes can be bought."
"Yes, yes, of course. But there is a certain style, sir, a certain style. One knows a gentleman, sir."
"I've not noticed that it matters to the cattle, sir, if a man has a good horse and knows how to swing a rope. I don't believe they have any preference as to whether a man is a gentleman or not ... And in these days all manner of men come west."
"Yes, yes, of course." Major Timberly lit his pipe. "I understand you've been shot at?"
"More than that, sir. I've been hit."
"And you've no idea who did it?"
"Not at present, sir."
"Talon, I need men. Especially, I need a man who is good with a gun. It looks to me like this country is headed for a war ... I don't know why, or how, or when ... I don't know who will begin it, but I want to win." He puffed strongly on the pipe. "Furthermore, I intend to win."
"What do you hope to gain, sir?"
"Peace ... Security. For a little while, at least."
"Of course, sir. They are things we never have for long, do we, sir?" I paused. "If you are wanting to hire me as a warrior, don't waste your time. I am a cowhand, that's all."
"Is that why Rossiter hired you?" the major spoke sharply, his irritation showing.
"I suspect I was hired because Joe Hinge said he needed a hand. They had no idea I could use a gun. I do not advertise the fact. Furthermore, I see no need for trouble here. I believe nothing is at stake that you, Balch, Saddler and Henry Rossiter cannot arrange between you. If you go to war, you'll play right into the hands of whoever is stirring this up."
He was very quiet. For a moment he smoked, and then he asked, very gently, "And who might that be?"
"I do not know."
"And who could it be but one of us three? We are all there is."
The Maderia was good. I put my glass down and said, without really believing it, "Suppose it was an outsider? Someone safely away, who causes certain things to happen that arouse your suspicions?"
I waved my hand at the surroundings. "Several hundred thousand acres of range are at stake, Major." Suddenly, I changed the subject. "How is your gather progressing?"
the Man from the Broken Hills (1975) Page 11