The Freebooters of the Wilderness eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 400 pages of information about The Freebooters of the Wilderness.

The Freebooters of the Wilderness eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 400 pages of information about The Freebooters of the Wilderness.

“Why, all right, Fordie,” the Senator rose, kicking the folds from the knees of his trousers, “if you boss the job, Fordie, I’ll let you cross the ranch!  You’ll take a few of the herders up with you?  And you’ll not let the sheep spread over the fields?  Better do it towards evening when it’s cool for the climb!  All right, we’ll call that a bargain!  Fordie’s on the job to pass the sheep up the trail; and just to show you I’m fair, here is Miss Eleanor for my witness, you can drive the whole bunch over my ranch!  Good night, all!  Everybody coming now?  Come on!  We’ll lead the way, Miss Eleanor.  It’s getting dark.  I’ll pad the fall if anybody behind trips.  Good night, Wayland; think that offer of mine over?  Not coming, Brydges?  All right, give Wayland a piece of your mind, as a newspaper man, about this business!  Night!  Good night, Calamity!”

CHAPTER IV

STACKING THE CARDS

Bat straddled the slab and lighted his pipe.

“Old man been giving you some good advice?”

“I don’t know whether you’d call it good or not.  Let’s heap the logs on, Brydges, and make the shadows dance.”

Brydges did some hard thinking and let the Ranger do the heaping.

“Sort of razzle-dazzler, MacDonald’s daughter; she’s a winner; but you can’t get at her!  Sort of feel when she’s talking to you as if her other self was ’way down East.  Wonder what the old curmudgeon brought her back here for?  If she’d let down her high airs a peg, she’d have every fellow in the Valley on a string.  She could have Moyese’s scalp now if she wanted it—­all that’s left of it?”

“You can bunk inside!  I’ll take the hammock.”  Wayland emerged from the cabin trailing a gray blanket and a lynx skin robe.  Bat continued to emit smoke in puffs and curls and wreaths at the top of the trees.

“How many acres do you patrol, Dickie?”

“About a hundred-thousand.”

“Is that all?  How many horses does the Govment allow?”

“None!  Buy our own!”

“Great Guns!  And you’re loyal to that kind of Service?  It’s bally loyal I’d be!  Why, Moyese allows me the use of any bronch on his ranch; and, when there’s a quick turn to be made, it’s a motor car.  Why don’t you let me send you up a couple of Moyese’s nags?  You could pasture ’em here and get their use for nothing.  I could do that right off my own responsibility.  Need be no connection with the old man.”

“Bat,” said the Ranger, “did you stay up here to say that to me?”

“I don’t know whether I did or not; but, now that I am here, I say it anyway; and I say a whole lot more—­don’t be a bally fool and buck into a buzz-saw!  Why don’t you take the Senator’s offer?  Holy Smoke!  What are you gaining stuck up here in a hole of a shack that’s snowed ten feet deep all winter?  What’s the use of fighting the Smelter thieves,

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Project Gutenberg
The Freebooters of the Wilderness from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.