He stepped back to his bedroll and slid his
Winchester from the blankets. That they had been unable to get, for he had been almost lying on it. Holding it in one hand, he picked up his boots with the other, and stepped back into the shadows. Putting down the rifle, he pulled on his boots, shrugged into a coat, and then took up his hat and rifle.
He edged around the fire and started toward the remuda. It was gone ... all the horses gone.
He stood for a minute trying to clear his dulled mind ... he had suspected an attempt to stampede the herd, and he had tied the line-back dun out in the brush, saddled and ready.
Now he slipped back there like a ghost ... the dun was there, a good fifty yards back in the brush along the route by which they had come.
He tightened the cinch and stepped into the saddle, coiling the picket rope as he sat there, thinking.
Then he rode out to the cattle. And they were there, bedded down and quiet; but no riders rode around them, no voices sang.
Oddly, at that moment he remembered his own curiosity about why cowpunchers sang to cattle. The answer was simple enough. The longhorn steer is a wild animal, quick to stampede, and the men riding herd at night sang so that the cattle would not be surprised at the sound of their approach. Hearing the familiar voices reassured the animals, and they continued to doze or sleep. Trail drivers sang during the night watch more for the sake of the cattle than for their own amusement.
Riding up to them now, he began to sing softly, just loud enough so they could hear him. Slowly he swung around the herd, then made a second circle, farther out. He was looking for anybody or anything he might find. But he found nothing.
What had happened? Had they abandoned him, and the cattle? Had they all been spirited away by Indians? If so, why had he been left? Was this part of Williams’ game to win the herd? And what could he do now? What could he do alone?
As dawn began to break he rode back to the camp. He found no signs of struggle. The bedrolls lay as they had been left.
Evidently the men had got up, pulled on their boots, and walked quietly away, whether of their own volition or under the threat of a gun he had no way of knowing.
Going to the chuck wagon he dug out a side of bacon, filled a small sack with coffee, a couple of loaves of bread, and some odds and ends. He took a spare coffeepot, his cup, and whatever else he might need. Then he rode back to the herd.
The cattle were already up and stretching, grazing a little. The brindle steer that had been the leader since the third day had moved out and, head up, was waiting.
“All right, boy, let’s go!” Chantry said, and he started off, riding point. The brindle steer followed. Slowly, the others fell in behind, broken to the trail by long days of driving.
How long he could keep them together he did not know. The brindle steer pointed north toward the Big Timbers, and Tom Chantry circled back, driving in the laggards. The herd was moving.
Warily, he rode back to the point, watching the country around, which was relatively open.
What had he been expected to do? Cut and run? Start scouting for them and leave the cattle? Left to themselves, the herd would soon scatter, and no doubt they would soon realize he was alone and begin to fall out of the drive anyway. All he had going for him was that brindle steer and the ingrained habit of the days on the trail. But for the time the cattle moved off willingly enough.
The cattle had been moving steadily for nearly an hour when the Indians appeared.
First there was one, then another, then a dozen. They lined the crest of the low rise half a mile on his left and watched him.
They could see he was alone, one man and a great herd of cattle, held together only by the habit of the trail.
Suddenly from out of a draw, Sun Chief appeared. He rode to the drag, bunching those cattle that were beginning to lag and scatter.
A moment later, Bone McCarthy came from the shadow of a juniper on a low ridge, and rode down to the flank, and the cattle moved on toward Big Timbers and the Arkansas River.
At noon the Indians were still with them, watching. Bone circled around and tarred the point inward, and between them they bunched the cattle. With Sun Chief and Chantry standing guard, Bone McCarthy fried some bacon and made coffee.
“I found your railhead,” Bone told him. “It’s this side of the Colorado line, coming on about a mile a day, more or less. I found something else, too. I found a telegram for you.”
He handed the hand-written message to Chantry. It was brief and to the point.
Reverses here. Without the herd I have nothing. All depends on you. Doris sends love.
Earnshaw.
“Did you read this?”
“Couldn’t help it, open like that. Besides, I figured if I lost it I’d still know what it had to say. ... Tough.”
“He’s a good man, Bone. I can’t let him down.”
“Three men? More than two thousand head of stock, no remuda, and those Kiowas lookin’ down our necks? Man, you’ve bought yourself a big job.”
Chantry glanced toward the ridge. The Kiowas were there, watching, and somewhere nearby he could be sure the outlaws who wanted his cattle were watching too.
But most of all, he thought of French Williams. No matter what the man had been, Chantry had always, deep down within himself, believed that French would play his hand out, fair and square.
They rode out to the cattle and Sun Chief came to the fire.
The Kiowas were still out there, more of them now, and the Big Timbers were not far ahead, where he had promised to visit the Wolf Walker.
“Boss?” McCarthy said.
“What?”
“We got company.”