Page 17 of A Man Four-Square


  Chapter XVII

  "Peg-Leg" Warren

  Webb drove his cattle up the river, the Staked Plains on his right. Theherd was a little gaunt from the long journey and he took the last partof the trek in easy stages. Since he had been awarded the contract forbeeves at the Fort, by Department orders the old receiving agent had beentransferred. The new appointee was a brother-in-law of McRobert and theowner of the Flying V Y did not want to leave any loophole for rejectionof the steers.

  With the clean blood of sturdy youth in him Clanton recovered rapidlyfrom the shoulder wound. In order to rest him as much as possible,Webb put him in charge of the calf wagon which followed the drag andpicked up any wobbly-legged bawlers dropped on the trail. During thetrip Jim discovered for himself the truth of what Billie had said,that the settlers with small ranches were lined up as allies of theSnaith-McRobert faction. These men, owners of small bunches of cows,claimed that Webb and the other big drovers rounded up their cattle inthe drive, ran the road brand of the traveling outfit on these strays,and sold them as their own. The story of the drovers was different.They charged that these "nesters" were practically rustlers preying uponlarger interests passing through the country to the Indian reservations.Year by year the feeling had grown more bitter, That Snaith and McRobertbacked the river settlers was an open secret. A night herder had beenshot from the mesquite not a month before. The blame had been laid upon aband of bronco Mescaleros, but the story was whispered that a "badman" in the employ of the Lazy S M people, a man known as "MysteriousPete Champa," boasted later while drunk that he had fired the shot.

  Jim had heard a good deal about this Mysterious Pete. He was a killer ofthe most deadly kind because he never gave warning of his purpose. Theman was said to be a crack shot, quick as chain lightning, without theslightest regard for human life. He moved furtively, spoke little whensober, and had no scruples against assassination from ambush. Nobody inthe Southwest was more feared than he.

  This man crossed the path of Clanton when the herd was about fifty milesfrom the Fort.

  The beeves had been grazing forward slowly all afternoon and wereloose-bedded early for the night. Cowpunchers are as full of larks asschoolboys on a holiday. Now they were deciding a bet as to whetherTim McGrath, a red-headed Irish boy, could ride a vicious gelding thathad slipped into the remuda. Billie Prince roped the front feet of thehorse and threw him. The animal was blindfolded and saddled.

  Doubtful of his own ability to stick to the seat, Tim maneuvered thebuckskin over to the heavy sand before he mounted. The gelding wentsun-fishing into the air, then got his head between his legs and gave hisenergy to stiff-legged bucking. He whirled as he plunged forward, wentround and round furiously, and unluckily for Tim reached the hard ground.The jolts jerked the rider forward and back like a jack-knife without aspring. He went flying over the head of the bronco to the ground.

  The animal, red-eyed with hate, lunged for the helpless puncher. A secondtime Billie's rope snaked forward. The loop fell true over the head ofthe gelding, tightened, and swung the outlaw to one side so that hishoofs missed the Irishman. Tim scrambled to his feet and fled for safety.

  The cowpunchers whooped joyously. In their lives near-tragedy was toofrequent to carry even a warning. Dad Wrayburn hummed a stanza of"Windy Bill" for the benefit of McGrath:

  "Bill Garrett was a cowboy, an' he could ride, you bet; He said the bronche couldn't bust was one he hadn't met. He was the greatest talker thatthis country ever saw Until his good old rim-fire went a-driftin' downthe draw."

  Two men had ridden up unnoticed and were watching with no obviousmerriment the contest. Now one of them spoke.

  "Where can I find Homer Webb?"

  Dad turned to the speaker, a lean man with a peg-leg, brown as a Mexican,hard of eye and mouth. The gray bristles on the unshaven face advertisedhim as well on into middle age. Wrayburn recognized the man as "Peg-Leg"Warren, one of the most troublesome nesters on the river.

  "He's around here somewhere." Dad turned to Canton. "Seen anything of theold man, Jim?"

  "Here he comes now."

  Webb rode up to the group. At sight of Warren and his companion the faceof the drover set.

  "I've come to demand an inspection of yore herd," broke out the nesterharshly.

  "Why demand it? Why not just ask for it?" cut back Webb curtly.

  "I'm not splittin' words. What I'm sayin' is that if you've got any of mycattle here I want 'em."

  "You're welcome to them." Webb turned to his segundo. "Joe, ride throughthe herd with this man. If there's any stock there with his brand,cut 'em out for him. Bring the bunch up to the chuck wagon an' let me see'em before he drives 'em away."

  The owner of the Flying V Y brand wasted no more words. He swung hiscowpony around and rode back to the chuck wagon to superintend thejerking of the hind quarters of a buffalo.

  He was still busy at this when the nester returned with half a dozencattle cut out from the herd. In those days of the big drives many straysdrifted by chance into every road outfit passing through the country. Itwas no reflection on the honesty of a man to ask for an inspection and tofind one's cows among the beeves following the trail.

  Webb walked over to the little bunch gathered by Warren and looked overeach one of the steers.

  "That big red with the white stockin's goes with the herd. The rest maybe yours," the drover said.

  "The roan's mine too. My brand's the Circle Diamond. See here where it'sbeen blotted out."

  "I bought that steer from the Circle Lazy H five hundred miles from here.You'll find a hundred like it in the herd," returned Webb calmly.

  Warren turned to his companion. "Pete, you know this steer. Ain't itmine?"

  "Sure." The man to whom Warren had turned for confirmation was a slight,trim, gray-eyed man. Sometimes the gray of the eyes turned almostblack, but always they were hard as onyx. There was about the mansomething sinister, something of eternal wariness. His glance had a habitof sweeping swiftly from one person to another as if it questioned whatpurpose might lie below the unruffled surface.

  Homer Webb called to Prince and to Wrayburn. "Billie--Dad, know anythingabout this big red steer?"

  "Know it? We'd ought to," answered Wrayburn promptly. "It's the ladinobeef that started the stampede on the Brazos--made us more trouble thanany ten critters of the bunch."

  "You bought it from the Circle Lazy H," supplemented Billie.

  Peg-Leg Warren laughed harshly. "O' course they'll swear to it. You'regivin' them their job, ain't you?"

  The drover looked at him steadily. "Yes, I'm givin' the boys a job, but Ihaven't bought 'em body an' soul, Warren."

  The eyes of the nester were a barometer of his temper. "That's my beef,Webb."

  "It never was yours an' it never will be."

  "Raw work, Webb. I'll not stand for it."

  "Don't overplay yore hand," cautioned the owner of the trail herd.

  Clanton had ridden up and was talking to the cook. A couple of otherpunchers had dropped up to the chuck wagon, casually as it were.

  Warren glared at them savagely, but swallowed his rage. "It's yore say-soright now, but I'll collect what's comin' to me one of these days. You'reliable to find this trail hotter 'n hell with the lid on."

  "I'm not lookin' for trouble, but I'm not runnin' away from it," returnedWebb evenly.

  "You're sure goin' to find it--a heap more of it than you can ride herdon. That right, Pete?"

  The gray-eyed man nodded slightly. Mysterious Pete had the habit oftaciturnity. His gaze slid in a searching, sidelong fashion from Webb toPrince, on to Wrayburn, across to Clanton, and back to the drover. Nowolf in the encinal could have been warier.

  "Cut out the roan," ordered Webb.

  The ladino was separated from the bunch of Circle Diamond cattle. Warrenand his satellite drove the rest from the camp.

  "War, looks like," commented Dad Wrayburn.

  "Yes," agreed the drover. "I wish it didn't have to be. But Peg-Legcalled for a
showdown. He came here to force my hand. As regards thebeef, he might have had it an' welcome. But that wouldn't have satisfiedhim. He'd have taken it for a sign of weakness if I had given way."

  "What will he do?" asked young McGrath.

  "I don't know. We'll have to keep our eyes open every minute of the dayan' night. Are you with me, boys?"

  Tim threw his hat into the air and let out a yell. "Surest thing youknow."

  "Damfidon't sit in an' take a hand," said Wrayburn.

  One after another agreed to back the boss.

  "But don't think it will be a picnic," urged Webb. "We'll know we've beenin a fight before we get through. With a crowd of gunmen like MysteriousPete against us we'll have hard travelin'. I'd side-step this if I could,but I can't."