The Man From Bar-20 by Clarence E. Mulford (best books to read for young adults .txt) đ
- Author: Clarence E. Mulford
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It was a very cheerful cowpuncher who rode to the new cabin that evening, for he was matching his wits against those of his natural enemies, he was playing a lone hand in his own way against odds, and the game was only beginning.
In perfect condition, virile, young, enduring, he had serene confidence in his ability to take care of himself. He admitted but one master in the art of gunplay, and that man had been his teacher and best friend for years. Even now Hopalong could beat him on the draw, but barely, and he could roll his two guns forward, backward and âmixed;â but he could shoot neither faster nor straighter than his pupil.
Johnny could not roll a gun because he never had tried very hard to master that most difficult of all gunplay, regarding it as an idle accomplishment, good only for exhibition purposes, and, while awe inspiring, Johnny had no yearning for it. He clove to strict util: ity and did not care to call attention to his woodenâ handled, flare-butt Frontiers. There was no ornamentation on them, no ivory, inlay, or engraving. The only marks on their heavy, worn frames were 3 few dents. He had such a strong dislike for fancy guns that the sight of ivory grips made his lips curl, and such things as pearl handles filled him with grieving contempt for the owner.
He never mentioned his guns to any but his closest friends, and they were as unconscious a part of him as his arms or his legs. And it was his creed that no man but hhnself should touch them, his friends excepted. He wore them low because utility demanded it; and to so wear them, and to tie them down besides, was in itself a responsibility, for there were men who would not be satisfied with the quiet warning.
In other things, from routine ranch work to manhunting, from roping and riding to rifle shooting, the old outfit of the Bar-2O had been his teachers and they had taken him in hand at an early age. His rifle he had copied from Hopalong; but Red had taught him the use of it, and to his way of thinking Red Connors was without a peer in the use of the longer weapon.
Johnny was a genius with his six-guns, one of those few men produced in a generation; and he did not belong to the class of fancy gun-workers who shine at exhibitions and fall short when lead is flying and the nerves are sorely tried. He shot from his hips by instinct, and that is the real test of utility. Had he turned his talents to ends which lay outside the law he would have become the most dangerous and the most feared man in the cow-country.
John Logan awoke with a start, sat up suddenly in his bunk and grunted a profane query as his hand closed over his Colt.
âItâs Nelson,â softly said a voice from outside the window. âDonât make so much noise,â it continued, as its owner dropped a handful of pebbles on the ground. âI wanted you awake before I showed myself. Never like to walk into a manâs room in thâ dark, when heâs asleep anâ not expectinâ visitors. âSpecially when heâs worryinâ about rustlers. It ainât allus healthy.â
âAll right,â growled the foreman, âbut you donât have to throw âem; you can toss âem, easy, from there. Iâve got a welt on my head as big as a chew of tobacco. Iâm shore glad you couldnât find nothinâ out there that was any bigger. You cominâ in or am I cominâ out?â
The door squeaked open and squeaked shut and then a chair squeaked.
âYou got a musical room,â observed Johnny, chuckling softly. âYore bunk squeaked, too, when you sat up.â
âIt was a narrow squeak for you,â grunted Logan, reluctantly putting down the Colt. âIf Iâd seen a head Iâd âaâ let drive on suspicion. I was havinâ a cussed bad dream anâ was all het up. My cows was goinâ up Little Canyon in whole herds anâ I couldnât seem to stop âem nohow.â
âKeepinâ my head out of trouble is my long suit,â chuckled Johnny. âAnâ there ainât none of yore cows goinâ up Little Canyon not till I steal some of âem. Been wonderinâ where I was anâ what I was doinâ?â
âNot very much,â answered the foreman. âGot a match? We been gettinâ our mail regâlar every week, anâ thâ boys allus drop in for a drink at Popâs; anâ theyâre good listeners. Say! What thâ hâl is this I hears about puttinâ blankets on my cows anâ shovinâ âem into thâ river every night? Well, that can wait. Youâve shore made an impression on Olâ Pop Hayes. Thâ old Piute canât talk about nothinâ but you. Every time thâ boys drop in there they get fed up on you. Of course they donât show much interest in yore doinâs; anâ they donât have to. They says yoâre a dâ-d quitter, anâ stuff like that, anâ Pop gets riled up anâ near scalps âem. What you been doinâ to get him so friendly? I never thought heâd be friendly, like that, to anythinâ but a silver dollar.â
âI donât know just treat him decent,â replied Johnny.
âHuh! I been treatinâ him decent for ten years, anâ he still thinks Iâm some kind of an unknown animal. If he saw me dyinâ in thâ street he wouldnât drag me five feet, unless I was blockinâ his door; but heâs doinâ a lot of worryinâ about you, all right. What you been doinâ besides courtinâ Pop anâ Andy Jackson, washinâ gravel anâ ketchinâ fish?â
Johnny laughed. âIâve been playinâ cautious anâ right now I ainât shore that Iâve fooled âem a whole lot. Here, lemme tell you thâ whole thing âand he explained his activitives since leaving the CL.
At its conclusion Logan grunted. âYou got nerve anâ patience; an I mebby you got brains. If you can keep âem from beinâ shot out of yore head, you have. Anâ you say they ainât usinâ Little Canyon? I know they ainât usinâ it now; but was they?â
âNot since thâ frost come out of thâ ground,â replied Johnny. âI canât tell you about what they are doinâ because Iâm just beginninâ to get close to âem. Thâ next time you see me I may know somethinâ. Now you listen to me,â and he gave the foreman certain instructions, which Logan repeated over after him. âNow, then: I want about sixty feet of rope strong enough to hold me, anâ I want a short, straight iron.â
âCome with me,â ordered the foreman, slipping on his clothes; and in ten minutes they emerged from the blacksmith shop, which also was a storeroom, and Johnny carried a coil of old but strong rope and an iron bar.
âI never thought Iâd be totinâ a runninâ iron,â he chuckled. âIf my friends could only see me now! Johnny Nelson, cow-thief anâ brand-blotter!â
âYou neednât swell up,â growled Logan. âYou ainât thâ only one in this country right now.â
âWell,â said Johnny, âgo back anâ finish yore dr^am mebby you can find out how to make them cows come back through Little Canyon.â
âYoâre goinâ to do that,â responded Logan; âan I Iâm goinâ to close that window in case you come back. I ainât forgot nothinâ you said an I if we donât see one of yore signs for a period of five days, weâll comb yore valley anâ thâ whole Twin Buttes country. So Jong!â
Johnny melted into the dark, a low whistle sounded and in a few minutes Logan heard the rhythmic drumming of hoofs, rapidly growing fainter.
THE evening following his visit to the CL, Johnny went to bed early but not to sleep. For several hours he lay thinking and listening, and then he arose and put on his moccasins, threw on his shoulder Lo ganâs rope, now knotted every foot of its length, slipped out of the cabin and was swallowed up in the darkness along the base of the rocky wall. To cover the few yards between the cabin and the narrow crevice took ten minutes, and to go softly up the crevice took twice as long.
Reaching the top he listened intently, and then moved slowly and silently to a small clump of pines growing close to the rim of the steep wall enclosing the walled-in pasture, at a point where it was so sheer and smooth that he believed it would not be watched. Fastening one end of the rope to a tree, he lowered the rest of it over the wall and went down. Pausing again to listen, he made his way to a line of stones which lay across the creek, crossed with dry feet, and reached the northern wall of the pasture. This could be climbed at half a dozen places and he soon was up it and on his way north. After colliding with several bowlders and tripping twice he waited until the moon arose and then went on again at a creditable speed.
The crescent moon had risen well above the tops of Twin Buttes when a man in moccasins moved cautiously across a high plateau some miles north of Nelsonâs creek and finally dropped to all fours and proceeded much more slowly. From all fours to stomach was his next choice and he wriggled toward the edge of the plateau, pausing every foot or so to remove loose stones. These he put aside before going on again, for there is no telling where a rolling pebble will stop, or the noise it may make, when the edge of a mesa wall is but a few feet away. Coming to within an armâs length of the edge, he first made sure that the rim was solid rock and free from dirt and pebbles; and then, hitching forward slowly, he peered down into the deep valley.
Its immensity amazed him, for upon the occasion of his former reconnaissance he had viewed it from the outside; and as a picture of his own pasture flashed into his mind he snorted softly at the contrast, for where he had acres, this .great âsinkâ had square miles. It was wider than his own was long, and it stretched away in the faint moonlight until its upper reaches were lost to his eyes. It was large enough to hold one great butte in its middle, and perhaps there were more; and from where he lay he judged the wall below him dropped straight down for three hundred feet.
âThere ainât no line ridinâ here, unless thâ cows grow wings,â he muttered.
To the south of him were four lighted windows near the forbidding blackness of the entrance canyon, and from their spacing he deduced two houses. And across from the windows he could make out a vague quadrangle, which experience told him was the horse corral. As if to confirm his judgment there came from it at that moment a shrill squeal and the sound of hoofs on wood, muffled by the distance. And from the corral extended a faint line which ran across the valley and became lost in the darkness near the opposite cliff. This he knew to be a fence.
âIf this valley ends like it begins, three or four men can handle an awful lot of cows, âcept at drive time,â he soliloquized, and then listened intently to the sound of distant voices.
âŠ. many happy hours away,
A sittin anâ a
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