 CHAPTER I Why my father moved at the close of the Civil War, from Georgia to Texas, is to this good hour a mystery to me. While we did not exactly belong to the poor whites, we clasped with them in poverty, being renters, but I am inclined to think my parents were intellectually superior to that common type of the South. Both were foreign-born, my mother being Scotch, and my father a North of Ireland man. As I remember him, now, impulsive hasty in action, and slow to confess a fault. It was his impulsiveness that led him to volunteer and serve four years in the Confederate army, trying years to my mother, with a brood of seven children to feed, garb, and house. The war brought me my initiation as a cowboy, of which I have now, after the long lapse of years, the greater portion of which were spent with cattle, a distinct recollection. Sherman's army, in its march to the sea, passed through our county, devastating that section for miles in its passing. Foraging parties scoured the country on either side of its path. My mother had warning in time and said her house in order. Our workstock consisted of two yoke of oxen, while our cattle number three cows, and for saving them from the foragers credit must be given to my mother's general ship. There was a wild cane-break in which the cattle fed, several hundred acres in extent, about a mile from our little farm, and it was necessary to bell them in order to locate them when wanted. But the cows were in the habit of coming up to be milked, and a soldier can hear a bell as well as anyone. I was a lad of eight at the time, and while my two older brothers worked our few fields, I was sent into the cane-break to herd the cattle. We had removed the bells from the oxen and the cows, but one ox was belled after darkness each evening, to be unbelled again at daybreak. I always carried the bell with me, stuffed with grass, in order to have it at hand when wanted. During the first few days of the raid a number of mounted foraging parties passed our house, but its poverty was all too apparent, and nothing was molested. Several of these parties were driving herds of cattle and work-stock of every description, while by day and by night gins and plantation-houses were being given to the flames. Our one-roomed log cabin was spared due to the ingenious tale told by my mother as to the whereabouts of my father, and yet she taught her children to fear God and tell the truth. My vigil was trying to one of my ears. For the days seemed like weeks, but the importance of hiding our cattle was thoroughly impressed upon my mind. Food was secretly brought to me, and under cover of darkness my mother and eldest brother would come and milk the cows, when we would all return home together. Then before daybreak we would be in the cane, listening for the first tinkle, to find the cattle and remove the bell, and my day's work commenced anew. Only once did I come near betraying my trust. About the middle of the third day I grew very hungry, and as the cattle were lying down, I crept to the edge of the cane-break to see if my dinner was not forthcoming. Soldiers were in sight, which explained everything. Concealed in the rank cane I stood and watched them. Suddenly a squad of five or six turned a point of the break, and rode within fifty feet of me. I stood like a stone statue, my concealment being perfect. After they had passed I took a step forward. The better to watch them as they rode away, when the grass dropped out of the bell and it clattered. A red-whiskered soldier heard the tinkle, and wheeling his horse rode back. I grasped the clapper and lay flat on the ground, my heart beating like a trip-hammer. He rode within twenty feet of me, peering into the thicket of cane, and not seeing anything unusual turned and galloped away after his companions. Then the lesson taught me by my mother of being faithful over a few things flashed through my mind, and though our cattle were spared to us, I felt very guilty. Another vivid recollection of those boyhood days in Georgia was the return of my father from the army. The news of Lee's surrender had reached us, and all of us watched for his coming. Though he was long delayed when at last he did come riding home on a swallow-marked brown mule, he was a conquering hero to us children. We had never owned a horse, and he assured us that the animal was his own, and by turns set us on the tired mule's back. He explained the mother and us children how, though he was an infantryman, he came into possession of the animal. Now, however, with my mature years and knowledge of brands, I regret to state that the mule had not been condemned, and was in the U.S. brand. The story which preached the rebel once told me throws some light on the matter. He asserted that all good soldiers would steal. Can you take the city of St. Louis? was asked of general price. I don't know if I can take it, replied the general to his consulting superiors, but if you will give me Louisiana troops, I'll agree to steal it. Though my father had lost nothing by the war, he was impatient to go to a new country. Many of his former comrades were going to Texas, and as our worldly possessions were movable to Texas we started. Our four oxen were yoked to the wagon, in which our few household effects were loaded, and in which mother and the smaller children rode, and with the cows, dogs, and elder boys bringing up the rear, our caravans started, my father riding the mule and driving the oxen. It was an entire summer's trip, full of incident, privation, and hardship. The stock fared well, but several times we were compelled to halt and secure work in order to supply our limited larder. Through certain sections, however, fish and game were abundant. I remember the enthusiasm we all felt when we reached the Sabine River, and for the first time viewed the Promised Land. It was at a ferry, and the sluggish river was deep. When my father informed the ferrymen that he had no money, with which to pay the ferry-age, the latter turned on him remarking sarcastically. What, no money? My dear sir, it certainly can't make much difference to a man which side of the river he's on, when he has no money. When daunted by this rebuff, my father argued the point at some length. When the ferrymen relented, so far as to inform him, that ten miles higher up the river was affordable. We arrived at the fore the next day. My father rode across and back, testing the stage of the water and the river's bottom, before driving the wagon in. Then, taking one of the older boys behind him on the mule in order to lighten the wagon, he drove the oxen into the river. Near the middle the water was deep enough to reach the wagon-box, but with shouting and a free application of the gad, we hurried through in safety. One of the wheel-oxen, a black steer which we called Popeye, could be ridden, and I straddled him in fording, laving my sunburned feet in the cool water. The cows were driven over next, the dogs swimming, and at last, bag and baggage, we were in Texas. We reached the Colorado River early in the fall, where we stopped and picked cotton for several months, making quite a bit of money, and near Christmas reached our final destination on the San Antonio River, where we took up land and built a house. That was a happy home. The country was new and supplied our simple wants. We had milk and honey, and though the fig tree was absent, along the river grew endless quantities of mustang grapes. At that time, the San Antonio Valley was principally a cattle country, and as the boys of our family grew old enough, the fascination of a horse and saddle was too strong to be resisted. My two older brothers went first, but my father and mother made strenuous efforts to keep me at home, and did so until I was 16. I suppose it is natural for every country boy to be fascinated with some other occupation than the one to which he is bred. In my early teens, I always thought that I should like to either drive six horses to a stage or clerk in a store, and if I could have attained either of those lofty heights at that age, I would have asked no more. So my father, rather than see me follow in the footsteps of my older brothers, secured me a situation in a village store some twenty miles distant. The storekeeper was a fellow countryman of my father, from the same county in Ireland, in fact, and I was duly elated on getting away from home to the life of the village. But my elation was short-lived. I was to receive no wages for the first six months. My father counseled the merchant to work me hard, and, if possible, cure me of the foolish notion as he termed it. The storekeeper cured me. The first week I was with him, he kept me in a back warehouse shelling corn. The second week started out no better. I was given a shovel and put on the street to work out the poll tax, not only for the merchant, but of the two other clerks in the store. Here was two weeks' work in sight. But the third morning I took breakfast at home. My mercantile career had ended, and forthwith I took to the range as a preacher's son takes the vice. By the time I was twenty there was no better cowhand in the entire country. I could, besides speak Spanish and play the fiddle, and thought nothing of riding thirty miles to a dance. The vagabond temperament of the range I easily assimilated. Christmas in the south is always a season of festivity, and the magnet of mother and home yearly drew us to the family Hearthstone. There we brothers met and exchanged stories of our experiences. But one year both my brothers brought home a new experience. They had been up the trail, and the wondrous stories they told about the northern country set my blood on fire. Until then I thought I had had adventures, but mine paled into insignificance besides theirs. The following summer my eldest brother Robert himself was to boss a herd up the trail, and I pleaded with him to give me a birth. But he refused, saying, No Tommy, the trail is one place where a foreman can have no favorites. Hardship and privation must be met, and the men must throw themselves equally into the collar. I don't doubt, but you're a good hand. Still the fact that you're my brother might cause the boys to think I would favor you. The trail outfit has to work as a unit, and dissension would be ruinous. I had seen favoritism shown on ranches and understood his position to be right. Still I felt that I must make that trip, if it were possible. Finally Robert, seeing that I was over anxious to go, came to me and said, I've been thinking that if I recommend you to Jim Flood, my old foreman, he might take you with him next year. He is to have a herd that will take five months from start to delivery. And that will be the chance of your life. I'll see him next week and make a strong talk for you. True to his word, he bespoke me a job with Flood the next time he met him. And a week later, a letter from Flood reached me, terse and pointed, engaging my services as a trail hand for the coming summer. The outfit would pass near our home on its way to receive the cattle, which were to make up the trail herd. Time and place were appointed where I was to meet them in the middle of March. And I felt as if I were made. I remember my mothers and sisters twitted me about the swagger that came into my walk after the receipt of Flood's letter, and even asserted that I sat my horse as straight as a poker. Possibly. But wasn't I going up the trail with Jim Flood, the boss foreman of Don Lovell, the cowman and drover? Our little ranch was near a Cibolo Ford on the river. And as the outfit passed down the country, they crossed at that Ford and picked me up. Flood was not with him, which was a disappointment to me. Quince the forest acting as a gundo at the time. They had four mules to the chuck wagon under Barney McCain as cook, while the remuda under Billy Honeyman as horse wrangler, numbered 142 10 horses to the man with two extra for the foreman. Then for the first time, I learned that we were going down to the mouth of the Rio Grande to receive the herd from across the river in old Mexico. And they were contracted for delivery on the Blackfoot Indian Reservation in the northwest corner of Montana. Lovell had several contracts with the Indian Department of the government that year, and had been granted the privilege of bringing in, free of duty, any cattle to be used in filling Indian contracts. My worst trouble was getting away from home on the morning of starting. Mother and my sisters, of course, shed a few tears. But my father's stern and unbending in his manner gave me his benediction in these words. Thomas More, you're the third son to leave our roof. But your father's blessing goes with you. I left my own home beyond the sea before I was your age. And as they all stood at the gate, I climbed into my saddle and rode away with a lump in my throat, which left me speechless to reply. By Andy Adams. This LibriVonx recording is in the public domain. Receiving. It was a nice 10 day trip from San Antonio to the Rio Grande River. We made 25 to 30 miles a day, giving the saddle horses all the advantage of grazing on the way. Rather than hobble, forest night-herded them, using five guards, two men to the watch of two hours each. As I have little hope of ever rising to the dignity of foremen, said our Segundo, while arranging the guards, I'll take this occasion to show you varmints, what an iron will I possess. With the amount of help I have, I don't propose to even catch a night horse. And I'll give the cook orders to bring me a cup of coffee and a cigarette before I arise in the morning. I've been up the trail before and realized that this authority is short-lived. So I propose to make the most of it while it lasts. Now all of you know your places, and see you don't incur your foreman's displeasure. The outfit reached Brownsville on March 25, where we picked up flood and level, and dropping down the river about six miles below Fort Brown, went into camp at a cattle ford known as Plasso Ganado. The real Grandi was 200 yards wide at this point, and at its then stage was almost swimming from bank to bank. It had very little current. And when winds were favorable, the tide from the gulf ran in above the ford. Flood had spent the past two weeks across the river, receiving and road branding the herd. So when the cattle should reach the river on the Mexican side, we were in honor bound to accept everything bearing the circle dot on the left hip. The contract called for a thousand she cattle, three and four years of age, and 2004 and five year old bees, estimated has sufficient to fill a million pound beef contract. For fear of losses on the trail, our foreman had accepted 50 extra head of each class, and are heard at starting with number 3100 head. They were coming up from ranches in the interior, and we expected to cross them at the first favorable day after their arrival. A number of different rancheros had turned in cattle in making up the herd, and flood reported them in good, strong condition. Lovell and Flood were a good team of cowmen. The former as a youth had carried a musket in the ranks of the Union Army, and at the end of that struggle cast his fortune with Texas, where others had seen nothing but the desolation of war. Lovell saw opportunities of business, and had yearly forged ahead as a drover and a beef contractor. He was well calculated to manage the cattle business, but was irritable and inclined to borrow trouble, therefore unqualified personally to oversee the actual management of a cow herd. In repose, Don Lovell was slow, almost dull, but in an emergency was astonishing quick wittet and alert. He never insisted on temperance among his men, and though usually of a placid temperament, when out of tobacco, Lord. Jim Flood, on the other hand, was in a hundred respects the antithesis of his employer. Born to the soil of Texas, he knew nothing but cattle, but he knew them thoroughly. Yet in their calling the pair were a harmonious unit. He never crossed a bridge till he reached it, and was indulgent with his men, and would overlook any fault so long as they rendered faithful service. Priest told me this incident. Flood had hired a man at Red River the year before, when a self-appointed guardian, present, called Flood to one side and said, Don't you know that the man you just hired is the worst drunkard in this country? No, I didn't know it, replied Flood. But I'm glad to hear he is. I don't want to ruin an innocent man, and a trail outfit is not supposed to have any morals. Just so the herd count doesn't shy on the day of delivery, I don't mind how many drinks the outfit takes. The next morning after going into camp, the first thing was the allotment of our mounts for the trip. Flood had the first pick, and cut twelve bays and browns. His preference for solid colors, though they were not the largest in the remuda, showed his practical sense of horses. When it came the boys turned the cut, we were only allowed to cut one at a time by turns, even casting lots for the first choice. We had ridden the horses enough to have a fair idea as to their merits, and every lad was his own judge. There were, as it happened, only three pinto horses in the entire saddle-stock, and these three were the last left of the entire bunch. Now a little boy or girl, and many an older person, thinks that a spotted horse is the real thing. But practical cattlemen know that this freak of color, enraged bred horses, is the result of in and inbreeding, with consequent physical and mental deterioration. It was my good fortune that morning to get a good mount of horses, three sorrels, two greys, two coyotes, a black, a brown, and a groula. The black was my second pick, and though the color is not a hearty one, his bread-basket indicated that he could carry food for a long ride, and he ought to be a good swimmer. My judgment of him was confirmed throughout the trip, as I used him for my night-horse, and when we had swimming rivers to ford. I gave this black the name of Nigger Boy. For the trip each man was expected to furnish his own accoutrements. In saddles we had the ordinary Texas make, the housings of which covered our mounts from withers to hips, and would weigh from thirty to forty pounds, bedecked with the latest in the way of trimmings and trappings. Our bridles were in keeping with the saddles, the reins as long as plow-lines, while the bit was frequently ornamental and costly. The indispensable slicker, a great coat of oiled canvas, was ever at hand, securely tied to our cantal strings. Spurs were a matter of taste. If a rider carried a quart, he usually dispensed with spurs, though, when used, those with large dull rowls were the make commonly chosen. In the matter of leggings not over half our outfit had any. As a trail herd always kept in the open, and except for night-herding, they were too warm in the summer. Our craft never used a cattle whip, but if emergency required, the loose end of a rope served instead, and was more humane. Either flood or level went in the town every afternoon with some of the boys expecting to hear from the cattle. On one trip they took along the wagon, laying in a month's supplies. The rest of us amused ourselves in various ways. One afternoon when the tide was in, we tried our swimming horses in the river, stripping to our under-clothing, and, with nothing but a bridle on our horses, plunged into tide-water. My nigger-boy swam from bank to bank like a duck. On return I slid off behind and taken his tail, let him tow me to our side, where he arrived snorting like a tugboat. One evening on their return from Brownsville, flood brought word that the herd would camp that night within fifteen miles of the river. At daybreak, level in the foreman, with fox quarter-night and myself, started to meet the herd. The nearest ferry was at Brownsville, and it was eleven o'clock when we reached the cattle. Flood had dispensed with an interpreter, and had taken quarter-night and me along to do the interpreting. The cattle were well shed and in good flesh for such an early season of the year, and in receiving our foreman had been careful, and had accepted only such as had the strength for a long voyage. They were the long-legged, long-horned southern cattle, pale-colored as a rule, possessed the running power of a deer, and in an ordinary walk could travel with a horse. They had about thirty vicaros under a corporal driving the herd, and the cattle were strung out in regular trailing manner. We rode with them until the noon hour, when with the understanding that they were to bring the herd to Passo-Gonado by ten o'clock the following day, we rode for Matamoros. Lovell had other herds to start on the trail that year, and was very anxious to cross the cattle the following day, so as to get the weekly steamer, the only mode of travel, which left Port Isabel for Galveston on the first of April. The next morning was bright and clear, with an east wind which ensured a flood tied in the river. On first sighting the herd that morning, we made ready to cross them as soon as they reached the river. The wagon was moved up within a hundred yards of the ford, and a substantial corral of ropes was stretched. The entire saddle-stock was driven in, so as to be at hand in case a hasty change of mounts was required. By this time, Honeyman knew the horses of each man's mount, so all we had to do was to sing out for our horse, and Billy would have a rope on one, and have him at hand before you could unsaddle a tired one. On account of our linguistic accomplishments, Quaternay and I were to be sent across the river to put the cattle in and otherwise assume control. On the Mexican side, there was a single string of high brush fence on the lower side of the ford, commencing well out in the water, and running back about two hundred yards, thus giving us a half-shoot, enforcing the cattle to take swimming water. The ford had been used for years in crossing cattle, but I believe this was the first herd ever crossed that was intended for the trail, or for beyond the bounds of Texas. When the herd was within a mile of the river, Fox and I shed our saddles and boots and surf-plus clothing and started to meet it. The water was chilly, but we struck it with a shout, and with the cheers of our outfit behind us swam like smugglers. A swimming-horse needs freedom, and we scarcely touched the reins, but with one hand buried in a main hold, and giving gentle slaps on the neck with the other, we guided our horses for the other's shore. I was proving out my black. Fox had a gray of equal-barrel displacement, both good swimmers, and on reaching the Mexican shore, we dismounted and allowed them to roll in the warm sand. Flood had given us general instructions, and we halted the herd about half a mile from the river. The Mexican corporal was only too glad to have us assume charge, and assured us that he and his outfit were ours to command. I at once proclaimed Fox Quarternight, whose years and experience outranked mine, the gringo corporal for the day, at which the Vicaros smiled, but I noticed they never used the word. On Fox's suggestion, the Mexican corporal brought up his wagon and corralled his horses as we had done, when his cook to our delight invited all to have coffee before starting. That cook won our everlasting regards, for his coffee was delicious. We praised it highly, whereupon the corporal ordered the cook to have it at hand for the men in the intervals between crossing the different bunches of cattle. A March Day on the Real Grandi, with wet clothing, is not summer, and the Vicaros hesitated a bit before following the example of Quarternight and myself, and dispensing with saddle and boots. Five men were then detailed the hold the herd as compact as possible, and the remainder, twenty-seven all told, cut off about three hundred head and start it for the river. I took the lead, for though cattle are less gregarious by nature than other animals, under pressure of excitement they will follow a leader. It was about noon and the herd were thirsty, so when we reached the brush-suit, all hands started them on a run for the water. When the cattle were once inside the wing, we went rapidly, four of the caros riding outside the fence to keep the cattle from turning the chute on reaching the swimming water. The leaders were crowding me close when nigger breasted the water, and closely followed by several lead cattle I struck straight for the American shore. The Vicaros forced every hoof into the river, following and shouting as far as the midstream. When they were swimming so nicely, Quarternight called off the men and all turned their horses back to the Mexican side. On landing opposite the exit from the ford, our men held the cattle as they came out in order to bait the next bunch. I rested my horse only a few minutes before taking the water again, but Lovell urged me to take an extra horse across so as to have a change in case my black became fagged and swimming. Quarternight was a harsh Segundo, for no sooner had I reached the other bank than he cut off the second bunch of about four hundred and started them. Turning nigger-boy loose behind the brush fence so as to be out of the way, I galloped out on my second horse, meeting the cattle, turned again and took the lead for the river. My substitute did not swim with the freedom and ease of the black, and several times cattle swam so near that I could lay my hand on their backs. When about half way over I heard shouting behind me in English, and I'm looking back saw nigger-boy swimming after us. A number of Vicaros attempted to catch him, but he out swam them and came out with the cattle. The excitement was too much for him to miss. Each trip was a repetition of the former with very an incident. Every hoof was over in less than two hours. On the last trip in which there were about seven hundred head, the horse of one of the Mexican Vicaros took cramps, it was supposed, at about the middle of the river and sank without a moment's warning. A number of us heard the man's terrified cry, only in time to see horse and riders sink. Every man within reach turned to the rescue, and a moment later the man rose to the surface. Fox caught him by the shirt and shaking the water out of him, turned him over to one of the other Vicaros, who towed him back to their own side. Strange as it may appear, the horse never came to the surface again, which supported the supposition of cramps. After a change of clothes for quarter-night and myself, and rather late dinner for all hands, there yet remained the counting of the herd. The Mexican corporal and two of his men had come over for the purpose, and though Lovell and several wealthy rancheros, the cellars of the cattle, were present, it remained for flood in the corporal to make the final count, as between buyer and seller. There was also present a river guard sent out by the United States Custom House as a matter of form in the entry papers, who also insisted on counting. In order to have a second count on the herd, Lovell ordered the rebel to count opposite the government's man. We strung the cattle out, now loggy with water, and after making quite a circle, brought the herd around, where there was quite a bluff bank on the river. The herd handled well, and for a quarter of an hour we lined them between our four mounted counters. The only difference in the manner of counting between flood and the Mexican corporal was that the American used a tally string tied to the pommel of the saddle, on which were ten knots, keeping count by slipping a knot on each even hundred, while the Mexican used ten small pebbles, shifting a pebble from one hand to the other on hundreds. Just a mere difference in nationality, Lovell had me interpret to the selling dons. When the count ended, only two of the men agreed on numbers. The rebel and the corporal, making the same thirty one hundred and five, flood being one under, and the custom house man, one over. Lovell at once accepted the count of priest and the corporal, and the delivery, which, as I learned during the interpretation that followed, was to be sealed with a supper that night in Brownsville, was consummated. Lovell was compelled to leave us, to make the final payment for the herd, and we would not see him again for some time. They were all seated in a vehicle, ready to start for town, when the cowmen said to his foreman, Now Jim, I can't give you any pointers on handling a herd, but you have until the tenth day of September to reach the Blackfoot Agency. An average of fifteen miles a day will put you there on time, so don't hurry. I'll try and see you at Dodge and Ogallala on the way. Now, live well, for I like your outfit of men. Your credit letter is good anywhere you need supplies, and if you want more horses on the trail, buy them and draft on me, through your letter of credit. If any of your men meet with an accident or get sick, look out for them the same as you would for yourself, and I'll honor all bills. And don't be stingy over your expense account. For a fat herd don't make money, you and I had better quit cows. I had been detained to do any interpreting needful, and at parting, love will beckon to me. When I rode alongside the carriage, he gave me his hand and said, Flood tells me today that you're a brother of Bob Quirk. Bob is to be foreman of my herd that I'm putting up in Nueces County. I'm glad you're here with Jim, though, for it's a longer trip. Yes, you'll get all the circus there is, and stay for the concert besides. They say God is good to the poor and the Irish, and if that's so, you'll pull through all right. Goodbye, son. And as he gave me a hearty ringing grip of the hand, I couldn't help feeling friendly towards him. Yankee that he was. After Lovell and the Dons had gone, Flood ordered McCann to move his wagon back from the river about a mile. It was now too late in the day to start the herd, and we wanted to graze them well, as it was our first night with them. About half our outfit grazed them around on a large circle, preparatory to bringing them up to the bedground as it grew dusk. In the untrammeled freedom of the native range, a cow or steer will pick old dry grass on which to lie down, and if it is summer, will prefer an elevation sufficient to catch any passing breeze. Flood was familiar with the habits of cattle, and selected a nice elevation on which the old dry grass of the previous summer's growth lay mad at it like a carpet. Our saddle horses by this time were fairly well broken to camp life, and with a cattle on hand, night herding them had to be abandoned. Billy Hunnaman, however, had noticed several horses that were inclined to stray on day herd, and these few leaders were so well marked in his memory that as a matter of precaution he insisted on putting a rope hobble on them. At every noon and night camp we strung a rope from the hind wheel of our wagon, and another from the front end of the wagon tongue, back to stakes driven in the ground or held by a man, forming a triangular corral. Thus in a few minutes under any conditions we could construct a temporary corral for catching a change of mounts, or for the wrangler to hobble untrustworthy horses. On the trail all horses are free at night, except the regular night ones, which are used constantly during the entire trip, and under ordinary conditions kept strong and improve in flesh. Before the herd was brought in for the night and during the supper hour, Flood announced the guards for the trip. As the men usually bumped in pairs, the foreman chose them as they slept, but was under the necessity of splitting two births of bedfellows. Rod Wheat, Joe Stallings, and Ash Brownstone were signed to the first guard, from eight to ten-thirty p.m. Bob Blaise, Bull Durham, and Fox Quarter-Night were given second guard from ten-thirty to one. Paul Priest, John Officer, and myself made up the third watch from one to three-thirty. The rebel and I were bunkies, and this choice of guards, while not ideal, was much better than splitting bedfellows and having them annoy each other by going out and returning from guards separately. The only fault I ever found with Priest was that he could use the poorest judgment in selecting a bedground for our blankets, and always talked and told stories to me until I fell asleep. He was a light sleeper himself, while I, being much younger, was the reverse. The fourth and last guard, from three-thirty until relieved after daybreak, fell to Wyatt Roundtree, Quince Forrest, and Moss Strayhorn. Thus the only men in the outfit, not on night duty, were Honeyman or Horse Wrangler, Barney McCann or Cook, and Flood the Foreman. The latter, however, made up by riding almost double as much as any man in the outfit. He never left the herd until it was bedded down for the night, and we could always hear him quietly arousing the cook and the Horse Wrangler an hour before daybreak. He always kept the horse on picket for the night, and often took the herd as it left the bedground at clear dawn. A half-hour before dark, Flood and all the herdmen turned out to bed down the cattle for our first night. They had been well-grazed after counting, and as they came up to the bedground there was not a hungry or thirsty animal in the lot. All seemed anxious to lie down, and by circling around slowly while gradually closing in, in the course of a half-an-hour all were bedded nicely on possibly five or six acres. I remember there were a number of muleys among the cattle, and these would not venture into the compact herd until the others had laying down. Being hornless, instinct taught them to be on the defensive, and it was noticeable that they were the first to arise in the morning in advance of their horn to kin. When all had laid down, Flood and the first guard remained, the others returning to the wagon. The guards ride in a circle about four rods outside the sleeping cattle, and by riding in opposite directions make it impossible for any animal to make its escape without being noticed by the riders. The guards usually sing or whistle continuously so that the sleeping herd may know that a friend and not an enemy is keeping vigil over their dreams. A sleeping herd of cattle makes a pretty picture on a clear moonlit night, chewing their cubs and grunting and blowing over contented stomachs. The night horses soon learn their duty, and a rider may fall asleep or doze along in the saddle, but the horses will maintain their distance in their leisurely sentinel rounds. On returning to the wagon, Priest and I picketed our horses, saddled where we could easily find them in the darkness, and unrolled our beds. We had two pair of blankets each, which, with an ordinary wagon sheet doubled for a tarplin, and coats and boots for pillows, completed our couch. We slept otherwise in our clothing worn during the day, and if smooth, sandy ground was available on which to spread our bed, we had no trouble in sleeping the sleep that long hours in the saddle were certain to bring. With all his pardonable faults, the rebel was a good monkey and a hell companion. This being his sixth trip over the trail, he had been with Lovell over a year before the two made the discovery that they had been on opposite sides during the late unpleasantness. On making this discovery, Lovell at once rechristened Priest the rebel, and that name he always bore. He was fifteen years my senior at this time, a wonderfully complex nature, hardened by unusual experiences into a character the gallant of whose moods ran from that of a good-natured fellow to a man of unrelenting severity and anger. We were sleeping a nine-knot gale when Fonk's quarter-night of the second guard called us on our watch. It was a clear, starry night, and our guard soon passed, the cattle sleeping like tired soldiers. When the last relief came on guard and we had returned to our blankets, I remember Priest telling me this little incident as I fell asleep. I was at a dance once in Live Oak County, and there was a stuttering fellow there by the name of Lem Todd Hunter. The girls, it seemed, didn't care to dance with him and pretend it they couldn't understand him. He had asked every girl at the party and received the same answer from each. They couldn't understand him. What—what—what—go—go—go to hell, then. Can—can—can you—you—you understand that? He said to the last girl, and her brother threatened to mangle him horribly, if he didn't apologize, to which he had finally agreed. He went back into the house and said to the girl, you—you—you—you—you—you—you need—need to go—go—go to hell. Your brother and I have made other arrangements. Chapter III of The Log of a Cowboy by Andi Adams this. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. THE START On the morning of April 1st, 1882, our circle-dot herd started on its long tramp to the Blackfoot Agency in Montana. With six men on each side and the herd strung out for three-quarters of a mile, it could only be compared to some mythical serpent or Chinese dragon, as it moved forward on its sinuous snail-like course. Two riders, known as Pointmen, rode out and well back from the lead cattle, and by riding forward and closing in, as occasion required, directed the course of the herd. The main body of the herd trailed along behind the leaders, like an army in loose marching order, ordered by outriders, known as Swingmen, who rode well out from the advancing column, warding off ranged cattle and seeing that none of the herd wandered away or dropped out. There was no driving to do. The cattle moved on their own free will, as in ordinary travel. Flood seldom gave orders, but as a number of us had never worked on the trail before, at breakfast on the morning of our start, he gave in substance these general directions. Boys, the secret of trailing cattle is never let your herd know that they are under restraint. Let everything that is done be done voluntarily by the cattle. From the moment you let them off the bed-ground in the morning, until they are bedded at night, never let a cow take a step except in the direction of its destination. In this manner you can loaf away the day and cover from fifteen to twenty miles, and the herd in the meantime will enjoy all the freedom of an open range. Of course its long tiresome hours to the men, but the condition of the herd and saddle-stock demands sacrifices on our part, if any have to be made. And I want to caution you younger boys about your horses. There is such a thing as having ten horses in your string, and at the same time, being a foot. You are all well-mounted, and on the condition of the remuda, depends the success and safety of the herd. Accidents will happen to horses, but don't let it be your fault. Keep your saddle-blankets dry and clean, for no better word can be spoken of a man that he is careful of his horses. Ordinarily a man might get along with six or eight horses, but in such emergencies as we are liable to meet, we have not a horse to spare, and a man a foot is useless. And as all of us younger boys learned afterwards, there was plenty of good solid horse-sense in Flood's advice. For before the trip ended there were men in our outfit who were as good as a foot, while others had their original mounts. Everyone fit for the saddle. Flood had insisted on a good mount of horses, and Lovell was common enough to know that what the mule is to the army, the cow-horse, is to the herd. The first and second day out there was no incident worth mentioning. We traveled slowly, privately making an average day's drive. The third morning Flood left us to look out a crossing on the Arroyo, Colorado. On coming down to receive the herd we had crossed this sluggish bayou about thirty-six miles north of Brownsville. It was a deceptive looking stream, being over fifty feet deep and between bluff-banks. We ferried our wagon and saddle-horses over, swimming the loose ones. But the herd was keeping near the coastline for the sake of open country, and it was a question if there was a ford for the wagon as near the coast as our course was carrying us. The murmurings of the gulf had often reached our ears to day before, and herds had been known in former years to cross from the mainland over to Padre Island, the intervening Laguna Madre being fortable. We were nooning when Flood returned with the news that it would be impossible to cross our wagons at any point on the bayou, and that we would have to ford around the mouth of the stream. Where the fresh and saltwater meet in the Laguna there had formed a delta or shallow bar, and by following its contour we would not have over twelve to fourteen inches of water, though the half-circle was nearly two miles in length. As we would barely have time to cross that day the herd was at once started, veering for the mouth of the Arroyo Colorado. Unriching it, about the middle of the afternoon, the foreman led the way, having crossed in the morning and learned the ford. The wagon followed, the saddle-horses came next, while the herd brought up the rear. It proved good footing on the sandbar, but the water in the Laguna was too salty for the cattle, though the loose horses lay down and wallowed in it. We were about an hour in crossing, and on reaching the mainland met a vicaro who directed us to a large freshwater lake a few miles inland, where we camped for the night. It proved an ideal camp with wood, water, and grass in abundance, and very little rain stock to annoy us. We had watered the herd just before noon, and before throwing them upon the bed-ground for the night, watered them a second time. We had a splendid campfire that night of dry, live oak logs, and after supper was over and the first guard had taken the herd, smoking and storytelling were the order of the evening. The campfire is to all outdoor life what the evening fireside is to domestic life. After the labours of the days are over, the men gather around the fire, and the social hour of the day is spent in yarning. The story is told may run from the sublime to the ridiculous, from a true incident to a base fabrication, from a touching bit of pathos to the most vulgar vulgarity. Have I ever told this outfit my experience with the vigilantes when I was a kid, at Bull Durham? There was a general negative response, and he proceeded. Well, our folks were living on the Frio at the time, and there was a man in our neighbourhood who had an outfit of four men out beyond Noise's Canyon hunting wild cattle for their hides. It was necessary to take them out supplies about every so often, and on one trip he begged my folks to let me go along for company. I was a slim slip of a colt about fourteen at the time, and as this man was a friend of ours my folks consented to let me go along. We each had a good saddle-horse and two pack-mules with provisions and ammunition for the hunting camp. The first night we made camp a boy overtook us with the news that the brother of my companion had been accidentally killed by a horse, and of course he would have to return. Well, we were twenty miles on our way, and it would take some little time to go back and return with the loaded mules. I volunteered, like a fool kid, to go on and take the packs through. The only question was, could I pack and unpack? I had helped him at this work, double-hand it, but now that I was to try it alone he showed me what he called a squaw-hitch, with which you can lash a pack single-handed. After putting me through it once or twice, and satisfying himself that I could do the packing, he consented to let me go on. He and the messenger returning home during the night. The next morning I packed without any trouble and started on my way. It would take me two days yet poking along with heavy packs to reach the hunters. Well, I hadn't made it over eight or ten miles at first morning. When, as I rounded a turn in the trail, a man stepped out from behind a rock, threw a gun in my face, and ordered me to hold up my hands. Then another appeared from the opposite side with his gun leveled on me. Inside half a minute a dozen men galloped up from every quarter, all armed to the teeth. The man on leave had given me his gun for company. One of these old smoke-pole, cap-and-ball, sick-shooters. But I must have forgotten what guns were for, for I elevated my hands nicely. The leader of the party questioned me as to who I was and what I was doing there, and what I had in those packs. That once, at least, I told the truth. Every mother's son of them was cursing and cross-questioning me in the same breath. They ordered me off my horse, took my gun, and proceeded to verify my tale by unpacking the mules. So much ammunition aroused their suspicion, but my story was as good as it was true, and they never shook me from the truth of it. I soon learned that robbery was not their motive, and the leader explained the situation. The vigilance committee had been in force in that county for some time, trying to rid the county of lawless characters. But lawlessness got into the saddle, and had bench warrants issued, and served on every member of this vigilance committee. As the vigilantes numbered several hundred, there was no jail large enough to hold such a number, so they were released on parole for appearance at court. When court met, every man served with a capious. Hold on, hold your horses just a minute, interrupted Quince Forrest. I want to get that word. I want to make a memorandum of it, for I may want to use it myself some time. Capious. Now I have it. Go ahead. When court met, every man served with a bench warrant from the judge presiding was present, and as soon as court was called to order, a squad of men arose in the courtroom, and the next moment the judge fell riddled with lead. Then the factions scattered to fight it out, and I was passing through the county while matters were active. They confiscated my gun and all the ammunition in the packs, but helped me to repack and start at me on my way. A happy thought struck one of the men to give me a letter which would carry me through without further trouble. But the leader stopped him saying, let the boy alone. Your letter would hang him as sure as hell's hot before he went ten miles farther. I declined the letter. Even then I didn't have sense enough to turn back, and inside of two hours I was rounded up by the other faction. I had learned my story perfectly by this time, and those packs had to come off again for everything to be examined. There was nothing in them now but flour and salt and such things, nothing that they might consider suspicious. One fellow in the second party took a fancy to my horse, and offered to help hang me on general principles, but kinder councils prevailed. They also helped me to repack, and I started on once more. But before I reached my destination the following evening I was held up seven different times. I got so used to it that I was happily disappointed every shelter I passed, if some man did not step out and throw a gun in my face. I had trouble to convince the cattle hunters of my experiences, but the absence of any ammunition, which they needed worst, at last led them to give credit to my tail. I was expected home within a week as I was to go down on the Nueces on a cowhound which was making up, and I only rested one day at the hunter's camp. On their advice I took a different route on my way home, leaving the mules behind me. I never saw a man the next day returning and was feeling quite gala on my good fortune. When evening came on I sighted a little ranch house some distance off the trail and concluded to ride to it and stay overnight. As I approached I saw that someone lived there, as there were chickens and dogs about, but not a person in sight. I dismounted and knocked on the door when without a word the door was thrown wide open and a half a dozen guns were poked into my face. I was ordered into the house and given a chance to tell my story again. Whether my story was true or not they took no chances on me, but kept me all night. One of the men took my horse to the stable and cared for him, and I was well fed and given a place to sleep, but not a man offered a word of explanation. From which I took it they did not belong to the vigilance faction. When it came time to go to bed one man said to me, Now, Sonny, don't make any attempt to get away and don't move out of your bed without warning us, for you'll be shot as sure as you do. We won't harm a hair on your head if you're telling us the truth. Only do as you're told, for we'll watch you. By this time I had learned to obey orders while in that county and got a fair night's sleep, though there were men going and coming all night. The next morning I was given my breakfast. My horse, well cuffed and saddled, was brought to the door, and with his parting advice I was given permission to go. Son, if you've told us the truth, don't look back when you ride away. You'll be watched for the first ten miles after leaving here, and if you lied to us, it will go hard with you. Now remember, don't look back, for these are times when no one cares to be identified. I never questioned that man's advice. It was, die dog or eat the hatchet with me. I mounted my horse, waved the usual parting courtesies, and rode away. As I turned into the trail about a quarter of a mile from the house, I noticed two men ride out from behind the stable and follow me. I remembered the story about Lot's wife looking back, though it was lead and not miracles that I was afraid of that morning. For the first hour I could hear the men talking and the hoofbeats of their horses as they rode along always the same distance behind me. After about two hours of this one-sided joke, as I rode over a little hill, I looked out of the corner of my eye back at my escort, still about a quarter of a mile behind me. One of them noticed me and raised his gun, but I instantly changed my view, and the moment the hill hid me put spurs to my horse so that when they reached the brow of the hill I was a half a mile in the lead, burning the earth like a caned dog. They threw lead close around me, but my horse lengthened the distance between us for the next five miles when they dropped entirely out of sight. By noon I came into the old stage-road, and by the middle of the afternoon reached home after over sixty miles in the saddle without a halt. Just at the conclusion of Bull's story, flood rode in from the herd, and after picking in his horse, joined the circle, and replied to an inquiry from one of the boys as to how the cattle were resting, he replied. The herd is breaking in the trail life nicely. If we'll just be careful with them now for the first month, and no bad storms strike us in the night, we may never have a run the entire trip. That last drink of water they had this evening gave them a nightcap that'll last them until morning. No, there's no danger of any trouble tonight. For fully an hour after the return of our foreman we lounged around the fire, during which time there was a full and free discussion of stampedes, but finally flood, suiting the action to the word by a rising, suggested that all hands hunt their blankets and turn in for the night. A quiet wink from Bull to several of the boys held us for the time being, and innocently turning to forest, Durham inquired. Where was, when was? Was it you that was telling someone about a run you were in last summer? I never heard you tell it. Where was it? You mean on the simmering last year when we mixed two herds, said Quince, who had taken the bait like a bass, and was now fully embarked on a yarn? We were in rather close quarters, herds ahead and behind us, when one night here came a cowherd like a cyclone, and swept right through our camp. We tumbled out of our blankets and ran for our horses, but before we could bridle. Bull had given us the wink, and every man in the outfit fell back, and the snoring that checked the storyteller was like a chorus of ripsaws running through pine knots. Forest took in the situation at a glance, and as he arose to leave, looked back and remarked, You must all think that's smart. Before he was out of hearing, Durham said to the rest of us, A few doses like that will cure him of sucking eggs and acting smart, interrupting folks. End of Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Of The Log of a Cowboy By Andy Adams This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. The Atascosa For the next few days we paralleled the coast, except when forced inland by various arms of the Laguna Madre. When about a week out from the Arroyo, Colorado, we encountered the Salt Lagoon, which threw us at least fifty miles in from the coast. Here we had our last view of salt water, and the murmurings of the Gulf were heard no more. Our route now led northward, through what were then the two largest ranches in Texas, the Running W and Laurel Leaf, which sent more cattle up the trail, bred in their own brand, than any other four ranches in the Lone Star State. We were nearly a week passing through their ranges, and on reaching Santa Petruda Ranch, we learned that three trail herds, of over three thousand head each, had already started in those two brands, while four more were to follow. So far we had been having splendid luck in securing water for the herd, once a day at least, and often twice and three times. Our herd was becoming well trailbroken by this time, and for range cattle had quieted it down and were docile and easy to handle. Flood's years of experience on the trail made him a believer in the theory that stampedes were generally due to negligence in not having the herd full of grass and water on reaching the bedground at night. Barring accidents which will happen. His view is the correct one. If care has been used for the first few weeks in properly breaking the herd to the trail. But though hunger and thirst are probably responsible for more stampedes than all other causes combined, it is the unexpected which cannot be guarded against. The stampede is the natural result of fear, and at night or in uncertain light this timidity might be imparted to an entire herd by a flash of lightning or peel of thunder. While the stumbling of a night horse or the scent of some wild animal would in a moment's time, from frightening a few head so in fact the herd has to throw them into the wildest panic. Amongst the thousands of herds like ours which were driven over the trail during its brief existence, none ever made the trip without encountering more or less trouble from runs. Frequently a herd became so spoiled in this manner that it grew into a mania with them so that they would stampede on the slightest provocation, or no provocation at all. A few days after leaving Santa Catruda Ranch, we crossed the Nueces River, which we followed up for several days, keeping in touch with it for water for the herd. But the Nueces, after passing Oakville, makes an abrupt turn, doubling back to the southwest, and the Atoscosa, one of its tributaries, became our source of water supply. We were beginning to feel a degree of overconfidence in the good behavior of our herd, when one night during the third week out an incident occurred in which they displayed their running qualities to our complete satisfaction. It occurred during our guard. About two o'clock in the morning the night was an unusually dark one, and the atmosphere was very humid. After we had been on guard duty possibly an hour, John Officer and I riding in one direction on opposite sides of the herd, the rebel circling in the opposite. Officer's horse suddenly struck a gopher burrow with his front feet, and in a moment horse and rider were sprawling on the ground. The accident happened, but a few rods from the sleeping herd, which instantly came to their feet as one steer and were off like a flash. I was riding my nigger-boy, and as the cattle headed towards me, away from the cause of their fright, I had to use both quirk and rowl to keep clear of the onrush. Fortunately we had a clear country near the bed-ground, and while the terrified cattle pressed me close, my horse kept the lead. In the rumbling which ensued all sounds were submerged by the general din, and I was only brought to the consciousness that I was not alone by seeing several distinct flashes from six shooters on my left, and realizing that I also had a gun fired several times in the air in replying. I was soon joined by priest and officer, the latter having lost no time in regaining his seat in the saddle, and the three of us held together some little distance, for it would have been useless to attempt to check or turn this onslaught of cattle in their first mad rush. The wagon was camped about two hundred yards from the bed-ground, and the herd had given ample warning to the boys' sleep, so that if we three could hold our position in the lead, help would come to us as soon as the men in the camp could reach their horses. Realizing the wide front of the running cattle, priest sent officer to the left and myself to the right to point in the leaders in order to keep the herd from splitting or scattering, while he remained in the center and led the herd. I soon gained the outside of the leaders, and by dropping back and coming up the line, pointed them in to the best of my ability. I had repeated this a number of times, even courting some cattle along the outside, or burning a little powder in the face of some obstinate leader. Went across the herd and to the rear. I saw succession of flashes like fireflies, which told me the boys were coming to our assistance. Running is not a natural gait with cattle, and if we could only hold them together and prevent splitting up in time they would tire, while the rear cattle could be depended on to follow the leaders. All we could hope to do was to force them to run straight, and in this respect we were succeeding splendidly. Though to a certain extent it was a guess in the dark. When they had run possibly a mile, I noticed a horseman overtake priest. After they had ridden together a moment, one of them came over to my point, and the next minute our foreman was racing along by my side. In his impatience to check the run, he took me with him and circling the leaders, we reached the left point, by which time the remainder of the outfit had come up. Now massing our numbers, we fell on the left point, and amid the flash of guns, deflected their course for a few moments. A dozen men, however, can cover but a small space, and we soon realized that we had turned only a few hundred head, for the momentum of the main body bore steadily ahead. Abandoning what few cattle we had turned, which owing to their running ability, soon resumed their place in the lead, we attempted to turn them to the left. Stretching out our line until there was a man about every twenty feet, we threw our force against the right point, and lead in hope of gradually deviating their course. For a few minutes the attempt promised to be successful, but our cordon was too weak, and the cattle went through between the riders, and we soon found a portion of our forces on either side of the herd, while a few of the boys were riding out the rush in the lead. Unfinding our forces thus divided, the five or six of us, who remained on the right, contented ourselves by pointing in the leaders. For the cattle, so far as we could tell, were running compactly. Our foreman, however, was determined to turn the run, and after a few minutes' time rejoined us on the right. When, under his leadership, we circled the front of the herd, and collected on the left point. When, for a third time, we repeated the same tactics in our efforts to turn the Sampeed. But in this, which was our final effort, we were attempting to turn them slowly, and on a much larger circle, and with a promise of success. Suddenly in the dark we encountered a mesquite thicket into which the lead cattle tore with a crashing of brush and a rattle of horns that sent a chill up and down my spine. But there was no time to hesitate. For our horses were in the thicket, and, with a herd closing in on us, there was no alternative but to go through it. Every man for himself. I gave Nigger a free reign, shutting my eyes and clutching both cantile and pommel to hold my seat. The black responded to the rowel, and tore through the thicket, in places higher than my head, and came out in an open space considerably in the lead of the cattle. The thicket must have been eight or ten rods wide, and checked the run to a slight extent. But as they emerged from it, they came out in scattering files and resumed their running. Being alone and not knowing which way to return, I rode to the right and front, and soon found myself in the lead of quite a string of cattle. Nigger and I were piloting them, where they listed, when Joe Stallings, hatless himself and his horse heaving, overtook me, and the two of us gave those lead cattle all the trouble we knew how. But we did not attempt to turn them, for they had caught their wind in forcing the thicket, and were running an easy stroke. Several times we worried the leaders into a trot, but as other cattle in the rear came up, we were compelled to loosen out and allow them to resume their running, or they would have scattered on us like partridges. At this stage of the run we had no idea where the rest of the outfit were, but both of us were satisfied the herd had scattered on leaving the Mesquite thicket, and were possibly then running in half a dozen bunches like the one we were with. Stallings' horse was badly winded, and on my suggestion he dropped out on one side to try and get some idea how many cattle we were leading. He was gone some little time, and his nigger cantered along easily in the lead. I managed to eject the shells from my six-shooter, and refill the cylinder. On Joe's overtaken me again, he reported that there was a slender column of cattle half a mile in length following. As one man could easily lead this string of herd until daybreak, I left Stallings with them, and rode out to the left nearly a quarter of a mile, listening to hear if there were any cattle running to the left of those we were leading. It took me but a few minutes to satisfy myself that ours was the outside band on the left, and after I rejoined Joe we made an effort to check our holding. There were about fifty or sixty big steers in the lead of our bunch, and after wearing them into a trot we opened in their front with our six shooters shooting into the ground in their very faces, and were rewarded by having them turn tail and head the other way. Taking advantage of the moment we jumped our horses on the retreating leaders, and as fast as the rear cattle forged forward easily turned them. Leaving Joe to turn the rear as they came up I rode to the lead, unfastening my slicker as I went, and on reaching the turned leaders who were running on an angle from their former course flaunted my fish in their faces until they re-entered the rear guard of our string, and we soon had a mill going which kept them busy and rested our horses. Once we had them milling our trouble as far as running was concerned was over, for all two of us could hope to do was to let them exhaust themselves in this endless circle. It then lacked an hour of daybreak, and all we could do was to ride around and wait for daylight. In the darkness preceding dawn we had no idea of the number of our bunch, except as we could judge from the size and compactness of the milling cattle which must have covered an acre or more. The humidity of the atmosphere which had prevailed during the night by dawn had changed until a heavy fog, cutting off our view on every hand, left us as much at sea as we had been previously. But with the break of day we rode through our holding a number of times, splitting and scattering the milling cattle, and as the light of day brightened we saw them quiet down and go to grazing as though they had just arisen from a bed-ground. It was over an hour before the fog lifted sufficiently to give us any idea as to our whereabouts, and during the interim both stallings and myself rode to the nearest elevation, firing a number of shots in the hope of getting an answer from the outfit, but we had no response. When the sun was sufficiently high to scatter the mists which hung in clouds, there was not an object in sight by which we could determine our location. Whether we had run east, west, or south during the night, neither of us knew, though both stallings and myself were satisfied that we had never crossed the trail. And all we did know for a certainty was that we had between six and seven hundred head of cattle. Stallings had lost his hat, and I had one sleeve missing and both outside pockets torn out of my coat, while the Mesquite Thorns had left their marks on the faces of both of us, one particularly ugly cut marking Joe's right temple. I've worn leggings for the last ten years, said stallings to me as we took an inventory of our disfigurements, and for about ten seconds enforcing that Mesquite Thicket was the only time I ever drew interest on my investment. There are heaps like a six-shooter, wear them all your life, and never have any use of them. With a cigarette for breakfast I left Joe to look after our bunch, and after riding several miles to the right, cut the trail of quite a band of cattle. In following up this trail I could easily see that someone was in their lead, as they failed to hold their course in any one direction for any distance, as free cattle would. After following this trail about three miles I sighted the band of cattle, and on overtaking them found two of our boys holding about half as many as Stallings had. They reported that the rebel and Bob Blades had bitten with him until daybreak, but having the freshest horses had left them with the dawn and ridden away to the right, where it was supposed the main body of the herd had run. As Stallings' bunch was some three or four miles to the rear and left of this band, Wyatt Roundfrey suggested that he go and pile it in Joe's cattle, as he felt positive that the main body was somewhere to our right. On getting directions from me as to where he would find our holding, he rode away and I again rode off to the right, leaving rod wheat with their catch. The sun was now several hours high, and as my black's strength was standing the test bravely, I cross-cut the country and was soon on another trail of stampeded cattle, but in following this trail I soon noticed two other horsemen preceding me. Knowing that my services would be too late, I only followed far enough to satisfy myself of the fact. The signs that left by the running cattle were as easy to follow as a public road, and in places where the ground was sandy, the sod was cut up as if a regiment of cavalry had charged across it. On again bearing off to the right, I rode for an elevation which ought to give me a good view of the country. Slight as this elevation was on reaching it, I made out a large band of cattle under herd, and as I was on the point of riding to them, saw our wagon and saddle-horses heave in sight from a northwest corner. Supposing they were following up the largest trail, I rode for the herd, where Flood and two of the boys had about twelve hundred cattle. From a comparison of notes our foreman was able to account for all the men, with the exception of two, and as these proved to be blades and priests I could give him a satisfactory explanation as to their probable whereabouts. On my report of having sight at the wagon and remuda, Flood at once ordered me to meet and hurry them in, as not only he, but Strayhorn and officer were badly in need of a change of mounts. I learned from a can, who was doing the trailing from the wagon, that the regular trail was to the west, the herd having crossed it within a quarter of a mile after leaving the bed-ground. Joining Honeyman I took the first horse which came within reach of my rope, and with a fresh mount under me we rushed the saddle-horses past the wagon and shortly came up with our foreman. There we rounded in the horses as best we could without the aid of the wagon, and before McCann arrived all had fresh mounts and were ready for orders. This was my first trip on the trail, and I was hungry and thirsty enough to hope something would be said about eating, but that seemed to be the last idea in our foreman's mind. Instead he ordered me to take the two other boys with me, and after putting them on the trail of the bunch which the rabble and blades were following, to drift in what cattle we had held on our left. But as we went we managed to encounter the wagon and get a drink and a canteen of water from McCann before we galloped away on our mission. After riding a mile or so together we separated, and on my arrival at the nearest bunch I found round-tree installings coming up with the larger holding. Throwing the two bunches together we drifted them a free clip towards the camp. We soon sighted the main herd, and saw a cross to our right at about five miles distance, two of our men bringing in another bunch. As soon as we turned our cattle into the herd, Flood ordered me, on account of my light weight, to meet this bunch, find out where the last cattle were, and go to their assistance. With a hungry look in the direction of our wagon I obeyed, and on meeting Durham and Brownstone learned that the outside bunch on the right, which had got into the regular trail, had not been checked until daybreak. All they knew about their location was that the upstage from Oakville had seen two men with circle-dot cattle about five miles below, and had sent up word by the driver that they had something like 400 head. With this meager information I rode away in the direction where one would naturally expect to find our absent men, and after scouring the country for an hour, sighted a single horseman on an elevation, whom from the grey mount I knew for Quince Forest. He was evidently on the lookout for someone to pilot them in. They had been drifting like lost sheep ever since dawn, but we soon had their cattle pointed in the right direction, and for us to take in the lead, quarter-night and I put the necessary push behind them. Both of them cursed me roundly for not bringing them a canteen of water, though they were well aware that at an emergency like the present our foreman would never give a thought to anything but the recovery of the herd. Our comfort was nothing, men were cheap, but cattle cost money. We reached the camp about two o'clock and found the outfit cutting out ranged cattle which had been absorbed into the herd during the run. Throwing in our contingent we joined in the work, and though forest and quarter-night were as good as a foot, there were no waters for a change of mounts to say nothing of food and drink. Several hundred mixed cattle were in the herd, and after they had been cut out we lined our cattle out for a count. In the absence of priests, Flood and John Officer did the counting, and as the hour of the day made the cattle sluggish they lined through between the counters as though they had never done anything but walk in their lives. The count showed sixteen short of twenty-eight hundred, which left us yet over three hundred out, but good men were on their trail, and leaving two men on herd the rest of us obeyed the most welcome orders of the day when Flood intimated that we would eat a bite and go after the rest. As we had been in our saddles since one or two o'clock in the morning before, it is needless to add that our appetites were equal to the spread which our cook had waiting for us. Our foremen, as though fearful of the loss of a moment's time, sent honeymen to rustle in the horses before we had finished our dinners. Once the remuda was corralled under the rush of a tireless foreman dinner was quickly over, and fresh horses became the order of the moment. The Atoskosa, our nearest water, lay beyond the regular trail to the west, and leaving orders for the outfit to drift the herd into it and water, Flood and myself started in search of our absent men, not forgetting to take along two extra horses as a remount for blades and priests. The leading of these extra horses fell to me, but with the loose end of a rope in Jim Flood's hand as he followed, it took fast riding to keep clear of them. After reaching the trail of the missing cattle, our foremen set up pace for five or six miles which would have carried us across the nuaces by nightfall, and we were only checked by Moss Strayhorn riding in on an angle and intercepting us in our headlong gait. The missing cattle were within a mile of us to the right, and we turned and rode to them. Strayhorn explained to us that the cattle had struck some recent fencing on their course, and after following down the fence several miles had encountered an offset, and the angle had held the squad until the rebel and blades overtook them. When officer and he reached them, they were unable to make any accurate count because of the range cattle amongst them, and they had considered it advisable to save horse flesh and not cut them until more help was available. When we came up with the cattle, my bunkie and blades looked wistfully at our saddles, and anticipating their want, I untied my slicker, well remembering the reproof of quarter-night and forest, and produced a full canteen of water, warm of course, but no less welcome. No sooner were saddles shifted than we held up the bunch and cut out the range cattle, counted, and found we had some three hundred and thirty odd circle dots. Our number more than complete. With nothing now missing, Flood took the loose horses and two of the boys with him and returned to the herd, leaving three of us behind to bring in this last contingent of our stampeded cattle. This squad were nearly all large steers and had run fully twenty miles before thanks to an angle in a fence they had been checked. As our foreman galloped away, leaving us behind, Bob Lates said, Hasn't the boss got a wiggle on him today? If he had made this old world, he'd have made it in half a day and gone fishing in the afternoon, if his horses had held out. We reached the adiscosis shortly after the arrival of the herd, and after holding the cattle on water for an hour, grazed them the remainder of the evening, for if there was any virtue in their having full stomachs, we wanted to benefit from it. While grazing that evening, we recross the trail on an angle and camped in the most open country we could find, about ten miles below our camp of the night before. Every precaution was taken to prevent a repetition of the run. Our best horses were chosen for night duty, as our regular ones were too exhausted. Every advantage of elevation for a bed-ground was secured, and thus fortified against accidents, we went into camp for the night. But the expected never happens on the trail, and the sun arose the next morning over our herd grazing in peace and contentment on the flowery prairies which border on the adiscosa. Our cattle quieted down nicely after this run, and the next few weeks brought not an incident worth recording. There was no regular trail through the lower counties, so we simply kept to the open country. Spring had advanced until the prairies were swarded with grass and flowers, while water, though scarcer, was to be had at least once daily. We passed to the west of San Antonio, an outfitting point which all herds touched in passing northward, and flood in our cook took the wagon and went in for supplies. But the outfit with the herd kept on, now launched on a broad, well-defined trail, in places seventy-five yards wide, where all local trails blend into the one common pathway, known in those days as the Old Western Trail. It is not in the province of this narrative to deal with the cause or origin of this cattle trail, though it marked the passage of many hundred thousands cattle which preceded our circle dots, and was destined to afford an outlet to several millions more to follow. The trail proper consisted of many scores of irregular cow paths, united into one broad passageway, narrowing and widening has conditions permitted, yet ever leading northward. After a few years of continued use, it became as well-defined as the course of a river. Several herds which had started farther up country were ahead of ours, and this we considered an advantage. For wherever one herd could go, it was reasonable that others could follow. Flood knew the trail as well as any of the other foremen, but there was one thing he had not taken into consideration, the drought of the preceding summer. True, there had been local spring showers, sufficient to start the grass nicely, but water in such quantities as we needed was growing daily more difficult to find. The first week after leaving San Antonio, our foreman scouted in quest of water a full day in advance of the herd. One evening he returned to us with the news that we were in for a dry drive. For after passing the next chain of lakes it was sixty miles to the next water, and reports regarding the water supply even after crossing this arid stretch were very conflicting. While I know every foot of this trail through here, said the foreman, there are several things that look scaly. There are only five herds ahead of us, and the first three went through the old route, but the last two, after passing Indian lakes, for some reason or other, turned and went westward. These last herds may be stock cattle pushing out west to new ranges, but I don't like the outlook. It would take me two days to ride across and back, and by that time we could be two-thirds of the way through. I've made this drive before without a drop of water on the way, and wouldn't dread it now, if there was any certainty of water at the other end. I reckon there's nothing to do but tackle her. But isn't this a hell of a country? I've ridden fifty miles today, and never saw a soul. The Indian lakes, some seven in number, were natural reservoirs with rocky bottoms, and about a mile apart. We watered at ten o'clock the next day, and by night camped fifteen miles on our way. There was plenty of good grazing for the cattle and horses, and no trouble was experienced the first night. McCann had filled an extra twenty-gallon keg for this trip. Water was too precious of an article to be lavish with, so we shook the dust from our clothing and want unwashed. This was no serious deprivation, and no one could be critical of another, for we were all equally dusty and dirty. The next morning by daybreak the cattle were thrown off the bed-ground and started grazing before the sun could dry out what little moisture the grass had absorbed during the night. The heat of the past week had been very oppressive, and in order to avoid it as much as possible, we made late and early drives. Before the wagon passed the herd during the morning drive, what few canteens we had were filled with water for the men. The remuda was kept with the herd, and four changes of mounts were made during the day in order not to exhaust any one horse. Several times, for an hour or more, the herd was allowed to lie down and rest. But by the middle of the afternoon thirst made them impatient and restless, and the point men were compelled to ride steadily in the lead in order to hold the cattle to a walk. A number of times during the afternoon we attempted to graze them, but not until the twilight of evening was it possible. After the fourth change of horses was made, Honeyman pushed on ahead with the saddle-stock and overtook the wagon. Under Flood's orders he was to tie up all the night horses, for if the cattle could be induced to graze, we would not bed them down before ten that night, and all hands would be required with the herd. McCann had instructions to make camp on the divide, which was known to be twenty-five miles from our camp of the night before, and forty miles from the Indian lakes. As we expected, the cattle grazed willingly after nightfall, and with a fair moon we allowed them to scatter freely while grazing forward. The beacon of McCann's fire on the divide was in sight over an hour before the herd grazed up to the camp, all hands remaining to bed the thirsty cattle. The herd was given triple the amount of space usually required for bedding, and even then for nearly an hour scarcely half of them lay down. We were handling the cattle as humanely as possible under the circumstances. The guards for the night were doubled. Six men on the first half, and the same on the latter. Bob Blades being detailed to assist Honeyman in night herding the saddle horses. If any of us got more than an hour's sleep that night, he was lucky. Flood, McCann, and the horse wranglers did not even try to rest. To those of us who could find time to eat, our cook kept open house. Our foreman knew that a well-fed man can stand an incredible amount of hardship, and appreciated the fact that on the trail a good cook is a valuable asset. Our outfit therefore was cheerful to a man, and jokes and songs helped to wile away the weary hours of the night. The second guard under Flood pushed the cattle off their beds an hour before dawn, and before they were relieved had urged the herd more than five miles on the third day's drive over this waterless mesa. In spite of our economy of water, after breakfast on this third morning, there was scarcely enough left to fill the canteens for the day. In view of this, we could promise ourselves no midday meal, except a can of tomatoes to the man. So the wagon was ordered to drive through to the expected water ahead, while the saddle horses were held available as on the day before for frequent changing of amounts. The day turned out to be one of torrid heat, and before the middle of the forenoon the cattle lulled their tongues in despair, while their sullen lolling surged through from rear to lead and back again in pietus yet ominous appeal. The only relief we could offer was to travel them slowly, as they spurned every opportunity offered them, either to graze or to lie down. It was nearly noon when we reached the last divide, and sighted the scattering timber of the expected water course. The enforced order of the day before to hold the herd in a walk and prevent exertion and heating now required four men in the lead, while the rear followed over a mile behind, dogged and sullen. Near the middle of the afternoon, McCann returned on one of his mules with the word that it was a question if there was water enough to water even the horse-stock. The preceding outfit, so he reported, had dug a shallow well in the bed of the creek, from which he had filled his kegs, but the stock-water was a mere lob-lolly. On receipt of this news we changed moust for the fifth time that day, and Flood taking Forrest the cook and the horse wrangler pushed on ahead with a remuda to the waterless stream. The outlook was anything but encouraging. Flood and Forrest scouted the creek up and down for ten miles in a fruitless search for water. The outfit held the herd back until the twilight of evening when Flood returned and confirmed McCann's report. It was twenty miles yet to the next water ahead, and if the horse-stock could only be watered thoroughly, Flood was determined to make the attempt to nurse the herd through to water. McCann was digging an extra well, and he expressed the belief that by hollowing out a number of holes enough water could be secured for the saddle stock. Honeyman had corralled the horses, and was letting only a few go to water at a time, while the night horses were being thoroughly watered as fast as the water rose in the well. Holding the herd this third night required all hands. Only a few men at a time were allowed to go into camp and eat, for the herd refused even to lie down. What few cattle attempted to rest were prevented by the more restless ones. By spells they would mill until riders were sent through the herd at breakneck pace to break up the groups. During these milling efforts of the herd we drifted over a mile from camp, but by the light of the moon and stars and the number of riders scattering was prevented. As the horses were loose for the night, we could not start them on the trail until daybreak gave us a change of mounts, so we lost the early start of the morning before. Good cloudy weather would have saved us, but in its stead was a sultry morning without a breath of air, which bespoke another day of sizzling heat. We had not been on the trail over two hours before the heat became almost unbearable to man and beast. Had it not been for the condition of the herd, all might yet have gone well, but over three days had now elapsed without water for the cattle, and they became feverish and ungovernable. The lead cattle turned back several times, wandering aimlessly in any direction, and it was with considerable difficulty that the herd could be held on the trail. The rear overtook the lead, and the cattle gradually lost all semblance of a trail herd. Our horses were fresh, however, and after about two hours' work, we once more got the herd strung out in trailing fashion. But before a mile had been covered, the leaders again turned, and the cattle congregated into a mass of unmanageable animals, milling and lowling in their fever and thirst. The milling only intensified their suffering from the heat, and the outfit split and quartered them again and again, in the hope that this unfortunate outbreak might be checked. No sooner was the milling stopped than they would surge hither and yawn. Sometimes half a mile as ungovernable as the waves of an ocean. After wasting several hours in this manner, they finally turned back over the trail, and the utmost efforts of every man in the outfit failed to check them. We threw our ropes in their faces, and when this failed, we resorted to shooting. But in defiance of the fuselage and the smoke, they walked sullenly through the line of horsemen across their front. Six shooters were discharged so close to the leaders' faces as to singe their hair. Yet, under a noonday sun, they disregarded this in every other device to turn them, and passed wholly out of our control. In a number of instances, wild steers deliberately walked against our horses, and then for the first time a fact dawned on us that chilled the marrow in our bones. The herd was going blind. The bones of men and animals that lie bleaching along the trails abundantly testify that this was not the first instance in which the plain had baffled the determination of man. It was now evident that nothing short of water would stop the herd, and we rode aside and let them pass. As the outfit turned back to the wagon, our foremen seemed dazed by the sudden and unexpected turn of affairs, but rallied and met the emergency. There's but one thing left to do, he said, as we rode along, and that is to hurry the outfit back to Indian lakes. The herd will travel day and night, and instinct can be depended on, to carry them to the only water they know. It's too late to be of any use now, but it's plain while those last two herds turned off at the lakes. Someone had gone back and warned them of the very thing we've met. We must beat them to the lakes, for water is the only thing that will check them now. It's a good thing that they are strong, and five or six days without water will hardly kill any. It was no vague statement of the man who said if he owned hell in Texas, he'd rent Texas and live in hell. For if this isn't Billy Hell, I'd like to know what you call it. We spent an hour watering the horses from the wells of our camp of the night before, and about two o'clock started back over the trail for Indian lakes. We overtook the abandoned herd during the afternoon. They were strung out nearly five miles in length, and were walking about a three-mile gate. Four men were given two extra horses apiece and left to throw in the stragglers in the rear, with instructions to follow them well into the night and again in the morning, as long as their canteens lasted. The remainder of the outfit pushed on without a halt, except to change mounts, and reached the lakes shortly after midnight. There we secured the first good sleep of any consequence for three days. It was fortunate for us that there were no range cattle at these lakes, and we had only to cover a front of about six miles to catch the drifting herd. It was nearly noon the next day before the cattle began to arrive at the waterholes in squads of twenty to fifty. Pitiful objects as they were, it was a novelty to see them reach the water and slack their thirst. Waiting out into the lakes until their sides were half covered, they would stand and low in a soft moaning voice, often for half-hour before attempting to drink. Contrary to our expectation, they drank very little at first, but stood in the water for hours. After coming out, they would lie down and rest for hours longer, and then drink again before attempting to graze, their thirst overpowering hunger. That they were blind, there was no question. But with the cause that produced it once removed, it was probable their eyesight would gradually return. By early evening the rear guard of our outfit returned and reported the tail end of the herd some twenty miles behind when they left them. During the day not over a thousand head reached the lakes, and towards evening we put these under herd and easily held them during the night. All four of the men who constituted the rear guard were sent back the next morning to prod up the rear again, and during the night at least a thousand more came into the lakes which held them better than a hundred men. With the recovery of the cattle our hopes grew, and with the gradual accession to the herd confidence was again completely restored. Our saddle stock not having suffered has had the cattle, were in serviceable condition, and while a few men were all that were necessary to hold the herd, the others scoured the country for miles in search of any possible stragglers which might have missed the water. During the forenoon of the third day at the lakes Nat Straw the foreman of Ellison's first herd on the trail rode up to our camp. He was scouting for water for his herd, and when our situation was explained, and he had been interrogated regarding loose cattle, gave us the news that no stragglers of our road brand had been met by their outfit. This was welcome news, for we had made no count yet, and feared some of them, in their locode condition, might have passed the water during the night. Our misfortune was an ill win by which Straw profited, for he had fully expected to keep on by the old route, but with our disaster staring him in the face a similar experience was to be avoided. His herd reached the lakes during the middle of the afternoon, and after watering turned and went westward over the new route taken by the two herds which preceded us. He had a herd of about three thousand steers, and was driving to the Dodge Market. After the experience we had just gone through, his herd and outfit were a welcome sight. Flood made inquiries after Lovell's second herd, under my brother Bob's foreman, but Straw had seen or heard nothing of them, having come from Goliad County with his cattle. After the Ellison herd had passed on, and out of sight, our squad, which had been working the country to the northward, over the route by which the abandoned herd had returned, came in with the information that the section was clear of cattle, and that they had found only three head dead from thirst. On the fourth morning, as the herd left the bed-ground, a count was ordered, and to our surprise we counted out twenty-six had more than we had received on the banks of the Rio Grande a month before. As there had been but one previous occasion to count, the number of strays absorbed into our herd was easily accounted for by priests. If a steer herd could increase on the trail, why shouldn't ours? That had over a thousand cows in it. The observation was hardly borne out when the ages of our herd were taken into consideration. But in eighteen eighty-two in Texas was a liberal day, and generation, and cattle stealing was too drastic a term to use for the chance gain of a few cattle when the foundation of princely fortunes were being laid with a rope and a branding iron. In order to give the Ellison herd a good start of us, we only moved our wagon to the farthest lake and went into camp for the day. The herd had recovered its normal condition by this time, and of the troubles of the past week not a trace remained. Instead our herd grazed in leisurely content over a thousand acres. While with the exception of a few men on herd, the outfit lounged around the wagon and beguiled the time with cards. We had undergone an experience which my bunkie, the rabble termed an interesting incident in his checkered career. But which not even he would have cared to repeat. That night while on night herd together, the cattle resting in all contentment, we rode one round together, and as he rolled a cigarette, he gave me an old war story. They used to tell the story in the army that during one of the winter retreats, a cavalryman, riding along in the wake of the column at night, saw a hat apparently floating in the mud and water. In hope that it might be a better hat than the one he was wearing, he dismounted to get it. Feeling his way carefully through the ooze until he reached the hat, he was surprised to find a man underneath and wearing it. Hello, Conrad, he sang out. Can I lend you a hand? No, no, replied the fellow, I'm all right. I've got a good mule yet under me.