第86章 FORT BUFORD(1)
We were at our rope's end.There were a few accounts to settle In Glendive, after which we would shake its dust from our feet.Very few of the quarantine guards returned to town, and with the exception of Sheriff Wherry, none of the leading cowmen, all having ridden direct for their ranches.Long before the train arrived which would carry us to Little Missouri, the opposition herds appeared and crossed the railroad west of town.Their commissaries entered the village for supplies, while the "major-domo," surrounded by a body-guard of men, rode about on his miserable palfrey.The sheriff, fearing a clash between the victorious and the vanquished, kept an eye on Sponsilier and me as we walked the streets, freely expressing our contempt of Field, Radcliff & Co., their henchmen and their methods.Dave and I were both nerved to desperation; Sheriff Wherry, anxious to prevent a conflict, counciled with the opposition drovers, resulting in their outfits leaving town, while the principals took stage across to Buford.
Meanwhile Sponsilier had wired full particulars to our employer at Big Horn.It was hardly necessary, as the frost no doubt was general all over Montana, but we were anxious to get into communication with Lovell immediately on his return to the railroad.We had written him from Miles of our failure at Powderville, and the expected second stand at Glendive, and now the elements had notified him that the opposition herds were within striking distance, and would no doubt appear at Buford on or before the day of delivery.An irritable man like our employer would neither eat nor sleep, once the delivery at the Crow Agency was over, until reaching the railroad, and our message would be awaiting him on his return to Big Horn.Our train reached Little Missouri early in the evening, and leaving word with the agent that we were expecting important messages from the west, we visited the liveryman and inquired about the welfare of our horses.The proprietor of the stable informed us that they had fared well, and that he would have them ready for us on an hour's notice.It was after dark and we were at supper when the first message came.An immediate answer was required, and arising from the table, we left our meal unfinished and hastened to the depot.
>From then until midnight, messages flashed back and forth, Sponsilier dictating while I wrote.As there was no train before the regular passenger the next day, the last wire requested us to have the horses ready to meet the Eastbound, saying that Bob Quirk would accompany Lovell.
That night it frosted again.Sponsilier and I slept until noon the next day without awakening.Then the horses were brought in from pasture, and preparation was made to leave that evening.It was in the neighborhood of ninety miles across to the mouth of the Yellowstone, and the chances were that we would ride it without unsaddling.The horses had had a two weeks' rest, and if our employer insisted on it, we would breakfast with the herds the next morning.I was anxious to see the cattle again and rejoin my outfit, but like a watched pot, the train was an hour late.Sponsilier and I took advantage of the delay and fortified the inner man against the night and the ride before us.This proved fortunate, as Lovell and my brother had supper en route in the dining-car.A running series of questions were asked and answered; saddies were shaken out of gunny-sacks and cinched on waiting horses as though we were starting to a prairie fire.Bob Quirk's cattle had reached the Crow Agency in splendid condition, the delivery was effected without a word, and old man Don was in possession of a letter from Flood, saying everything had passed smoothly at the Rosebud Agency.
Contrary to the expectation of Sponsilier and myself, our employer was in a good humor, fairly walking on the clouds over the success of his two first deliveries of the year.But amid the bustle and rush, in view of another frosty night, Sponsilier inquired if it would not be a good idea to fortify against the chill, by taking along a bottle of brandy."Yes, two of them if you want to," said old man Don, in good-humored approval."Here, Tom, fork this horse and take the pitch out of him," he continued; "I don't like the look of his eye." But before I could reach the horse, one of my own string, Bob Quirk had mounted him, when in testimony of the nutritive qualities of Dakota's grasses, he arched his spine like a true Texan and outlined a worm-fence in bucking a circle.