Cattle Brands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Cattle Brands.

Cattle Brands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Cattle Brands.

“Our old company was ordered out on the border once, when the Comanches were known to be south of Red River killing buffalo.  This meant that on their return it would be advisable to look out for your horses or they would be missing.  In order to cover as much territory as possible, the company was cut in three detachments.  Our squad had twenty men in it under a lieutenant.  We were patrolling a country known as the Tallow Cache Hills, glades and black-jack cross timbers alternating.  All kinds of rumors of Indian depredations were reaching us almost daily, yet so far we had failed to locate or see an Indian.

“One day at noon we packed up and were going to move our camp farther west, when a scout, who had gone on ahead, rushed back with the news that he had sighted a band of Indians with quite a herd of horses pushing north.  We led our pack mules, and keeping the shelter of the timber started to cut them off in their course.  When we first sighted them, they were just crossing a glade, and the last buck had just left the timber.  He had in his mouth an arrow shaft, which he was turning between his teeth to remove the sap.  All had guns.  The first warning the Indians received of our presence was a shot made by one of the men at this rear Indian.  He rolled off his horse like a stone, and the next morning when we came back over their trail, he had that unfinished arrow in a death grip between his teeth.  That first shot let the cat out, and we went after them.

“We had two big piebald calico mules, and when we charged those Indians, those pack mules outran every saddle horse which we had, and dashing into their horse herd, scattered them like partridges.  Nearly every buck was riding a stolen horse, and for some cause they couldn’t get any speed out of them.  We just rode all around them.  There proved to be twenty-two Indians in the band, and one of them was a squaw.  She was killed by accident.

“The chase had covered about two miles, when the horse she was riding fell from a shot by some of our crowd.  The squaw recovered herself and came to her feet in time to see several carbines in the act of being leveled at her by our men.  She instantly threw open the slight covering about her shoulders and revealed her sex.  Some one called out not to shoot, that it was a squaw, and the carbines were lowered.  As this squad passed on, she turned and ran for the protection of the nearest timber, and a second squad coming up and seeing the fleeing Indian, fired on her, killing her instantly.  She had done the very thing she should not have done.

“It was a running fight from start to finish.  We got the last one in the band about seven miles from the first one.  The last one to fall was mounted on a fine horse, and if he had only ridden intelligently, he ought to have escaped.  The funny thing about it was he was overtaken by the dullest, sleepiest horse in our command.  The shooting and smell of powder must have put iron into him, for

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Cattle Brands from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.