The Wrong Woman
thousand ways her
truck out in the direction of certain water-holes, his mission being to look over some B.U.
involved in a boggy water-hole. He threw the rope over her horns and pulled with his pony this way and that, but without success. Finally, when the sun was going down on failure, he resolved to kill or cure. He gave the rope another turn round the horn of his saddle and started up at imminent risk to her neck. Her legs were rooted in the tough mu
cattle, he was very long-sighted; his eye could reach out and read the half-obliterated brand on a distant cow-a faculty which saves a horse many steps, especially on a ranch where the cattle do not all belong to one owner. Tuck, being
Having taken in all visible details and circumstances, he ve
ming finally to where the subject of horse was being discussed, he joined himself to this multitude of counselors; and finding Hank Bullen among those present, he related his ex
ay?" asked Ed Curtis, who had
ght," sa
hite collar and cuffs
t have any hat on. I said she had on a dark dress with wh
She was going out that way. She rode a so
e grass. He was a short-coupled sorrel with a stocking on his near hin
h a big breastpin. I noticed it wasn't any eight-dollar hat; she had
a stay to turn him loose like
ing but these same facts, the ta
his eye along the row of horses at the hitching-rack. At the end of the row was an extremely starved-lookin
o you expect of a horse that is just out of the poor-house? There's a real
s and teeth; then he stepped back
nk of it?" asked
inquired Whallen
swered Todd. "This fellow t
easy enough put meat on a horse.
git-ap,"
anything?" a
er with him yesterday and he held it while I made a tie.
im?" inqui
e that suit of clothes they sold me up in Chicago. And Steve Brown says to me, 'I should
ew yesterday. When he was coming along the road he
l about the strange case o
s Steve Brown?" the
id n't get a right good view of his face. He said i
he came along with me to see them auction off the bunch of strays. This horse was one of them; that's why he's so t
woman come to
s were doing, and while he was there Pete remarked that sheep-life was getting pretty monotonous. So
n't see very plain,"
dd in disgust. "You
t quit on his own ho
gets through being drunk. He told me he had to get through
d did herding like that before. He a
him to go along and bid in this horse for me. I saw he was a good horse, but I d
ard and began feeling the distance between the horse's rump and floating ribs
se. "Ain't them bones plain enough to see? I guess you think
se like that and you see what you 're getting. W
ones he had been flouting, stepped back and held his peace; and pr
one side and then the other. He expected to get sight of some one of the crew that had brought the cattle into the loading-pens; but they had totally di
aid Toot Wilson,
ere
ey 're in there. He is making
N
ng Chase. It'
ident satisfaction. The heavy stock saddle, its quantities of leather all richly beflowered, was mounted on a trestle beside him. It was so near completion that the long saddle-strings now hung down in pairs all round, and these thongs, being of lighter-colored leather, and sprouting ou
of it, Al?" asked
big cinch rings and strong stirrup straps. The stirrups were
it?" he asked, point
eep hooded stirrups with a great superfluity of leath
s hand as if to quell this mental disturbance before it had gone too
nce rearranged
im-dandy,"
s and gave his attention to the principal speaker as he resumed his account of a ropi
nce Todd found his
g," he said. "Steve Br
story-teller. "He done that
s a woman out there w
n! What
past and saw them sitting by th
e herdin'?" aske
sheep. He's out there tending the
th them," said Harry Lee.
ey got?" inqu
s got
, what have they got?" repeated Tom a
at's reliable to settle up what he leaves. And this other fellow sees that everything is tended to and done o
whose untutored mi
this woman?" as
rass; and she's out there with h
Reedy tell she was alone just by the light of the fire? T
d just pulled up his st
se had hobbles on
she was going out there alone. And if there was anybody else around would n't they be eati
he very beginning and told it all, going into details
a felt hat? And
ck. It was turne
who that is!"
de of the tracks near the loading-pen. After a while the women folks got to talking about the place and making objections; so then the rent was r
astpin," s
t's
ection failed to bring up a parallel.
to herd sheep. They can raise all of them they want, but I 'll stick to cattle; 'specially in spr
as a lamb you've got to mix in and get her to adopt it. And half the time it's twins. And
h with that band of sheep, it would have taken Solomon to straighten out the family troubles. One t
Diefenbach, who had now tur
particular; no admittance unless he 's the right one, according to smell. And maybe she won't take one anyway. Then the lamb is up against trouble; he keeps going round trying to get dinner everywhere. If he 's
the philosophic Diefenbach. "Has
y likely she has twins, and it's all she can do to keep th
ts for the bunch of sheep. They are all tuned up to a different sound; so are the sheep. And the lamb and the sheep know each other by sound. Well, the sheep will hear that and she'll let out her sound and get an answer back, and that way he 'll find her in the bunch. Maybe they meet halfway; then she smells him and it is all right. Well, we have a thousand sheep all grazin
p won't have any lamb or any milk and another will be feed
do about that? How can he
born and see that every sheep takes her lamb and gets to liking it.
mentarily to his native tongue. He picked up a bea
ally travels in a circle,-and being now in their native el
d turn a fi
orld with noble
stantial and complete, when, by divers methods, it go