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Rangering - Page 3 |
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"'No, I don't think so, Sam, but you don't come. That's why
I'm complaining. You never have come in the whole ten years you've been
sheriff, and you know that we have voted for you to a man, in our neck of
the woods.' My father felt this last remark, though I think he never
realized its gravity before, but he took him by one hand, and laying the
other on his shoulder said, 'Joe, if I have slighted you in the past, I'm
glad you have called my attention to it. Now, let me tell you the first
time that my business takes me within ten miles of your place I'll make it
a point to reach your house and stay all night, and longer if I can.'
"'That's all I ask, Sam,' was his only reply. Now I've
learned lots of the ways of the world since then. I've seen people
pleasant to each other, and behind their backs the tune changed. But I
want to say to you fellows that those two old boys were not throwing off
on each other--not a little bit.
They meant every word and meant it deep. It
was months afterwards, and father had been gone for a week when he came
home. He told us about his visit to Joe Evans. It was winter time, and
mother and us boys were sitting around the old fireplace in the evening.
'I never saw him so embarrassed before in my life,' said father.
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A
range rider.
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'I did ride out of my way, but I was glad of
the chance. Men like Joe Evans are getting scarce.' He nodded to us boys.
'It was nearly dark when I rode up to his gate. He recognized me and came
down to the gate to meet me. "Howdy, Sam," was all he said. There was a
troubled expression in his face, though he looked well enough, but he
couldn't simply look me in the face. Just kept his eye on the ground. He
motioned for a nigger boy and said to him, "Take his horse." He started to
lead the way up the path, when I stopped him. "Look here, Joe," I said to
him. "Now, if there's anything wrong, anything likely to happen in the
family, I can just as well drop back on the pike and stay all night with
some of the neighbors. You know I'm acquainted all around here." He turned
in the path, and there was the most painful look in his face I ever saw as
he spoke: "Hell, no, Sam, there's nothing wrong. We've got plenty to eat,
plenty of beds, no end of horse-feed, but by G----, Sam, there isn't a
drop of whiskey on the place!"'
"You see it was hoss and cabello, and Joe seemed to think
the hoss on him was an unpardonable offense. Salt? You'll find it in an
empty one-spoon baking-powder can over there. In those panniers that
belong to that big sorrel mule. Look at Mexico over there burying his
fangs in the venison, will you?"
Ramrod was on guard, but he was so hungry himself that he
was good enough to let the prisoners eat at the same time, although he
kept them at a respectable distance. He was old in the service, and had
gotten his name under a baptism of fire. He was watching a pass once for
smugglers at a point called Emigrant Gap. This was long before he had come
to the present company. At length the man he was waiting for came along.
Ramrod went after him at close quarters, but the fellow was game and drew
his gun. When the smoke cleared away, Ramrod had brought down his horse
and winged his man right and left. The smuggler was not far behind on the
shoot, for Ramrod's coat and hat showed he was calling for him. The
captain was joshing the prisoner about his poor shooting when Ramrod
brought him into camp and they were dressing couldn't find him. He's built
like a ramrod."
After breakfast was over we smoked and yarned. It would be
two-hour guards for the day, keeping an eye on the prisoners and stock,
only one man required; so we would all get plenty of sleep. Conajo had the
first guard after breakfast. "I remember once," said Sergeant Smoky, as he
crushed a pipe of twist with the heel of his hand, "we were camped out on
the 'Sunset' railway. I was a corporal at the time. There came a message
one day to our captain, to send a man up West on that line to take charge
of a murderer.
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Cowboys sitting down to eat.
This image available for photographic prints
HERE!
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The result was, I was sent by the first train
to this point. When I arrived I found that an
Irishman had killed a Chinaman. It was on the railroad, at
a bridge construction camp, that the fracas took place. There were
something like a hundred employees at the camp, and they ran their own
boarding-tent. They had a Chinese cook at this camp; in fact, quite a
number of Chinese were employed at common labor on the road.
"Some cavalryman, it was thought, in passing
up and down from Fort Stockton to points on the river, had lost his saber,
and one of this bridge gang had found it. When it was brought into camp no
one would have the old corn-cutter; but this Irishman took a shine to it,
having once been a soldier himself. The result was, it was presented to
him. He ground it up like a machete, and took great pride in giving
exhibitions with it. He was an old man now, the storekeeper for the iron
supplies, a kind of trusty job. The old saber renewed his youth to a
certain extent, for he used it in self-defense shortly afterwards.
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This Erin-go-bragh--his
name was McKay, I think--was in the habit now and then of stealing a pie
from the cook, and taking it into his own tent and eating it there. The
Chink kept missing his pies, and got a helper to spy out the offender. The
result was they caught the old man red-handed in the act. The Chink armed
himself with the biggest butcher-knife he had and went on the warpath. He
found the old fellow sitting in his storeroom contentedly eating the pie.
The old man had his eyes on the cook, and saw the knife just in time to
jump behind some kegs of nuts and bolts. The Chink followed him with
murder in his eye, and as the old man ran out of the tent he picked up the
old saber. Once clear of the tent he turned and faced him, made only one
pass, and cut his head off as though he were beheading a chicken. They
hadn't yet buried the Chinaman when I got there. I'm willing to testify it
was an artistic job. They turned the old man over to me, and I took him
down to the next station, where an old alcalde lived, -- Roy Bean by name.
This old judge was known as 'Law west of the Pecos,' as he generally
construed the law to suit his own opinion of the offense. He wasn't even
strong on testimony. He was a ranchman at this time, so when I presented
my prisoner he only said, 'Killed a Chinese, did he? Well, I ain't got
time to try the case to-day. Cattle suffering for water, and three
windmills out of repair. Bring him back in the morning.' I took the old
man back to the hotel, and we had a jolly good time together that day. I
never put a string on him, only locked the door, but we slept together.
The next morning I took him before the alcalde. Bean held court in an
outhouse, the prisoner seated on a bale of flint hides. Bean was not only
judge but prosecutor, as well as counsel for the defense. 'Killed a
Chinaman, did you?'
Continued Next Page
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