A Texas Matchmaker eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 325 pages of information about A Texas Matchmaker.

A Texas Matchmaker eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 325 pages of information about A Texas Matchmaker.
to the disgust of the Mexican vaqueros—­Deweese enforced every humane idea which Nancrede had practiced the spring before in accepting the trail herd at Las Palomas.  There were endless quantities of stock cattle to select from on the two haciendas, and when ready to start, under the specifications, a finer lot of cows would have been hard to find.  The worst drawback was that they were constantly dropping calves on the road, and before we reached the river we had a calf-wagon in regular use.  On arriving at the Rio Grande, the then stage of water was fortunately low and we crossed the herd without a halt, the import papers having been attended to in advance.

Uncle Lance believed in plenty of help, and had brought down from Las Palomas an ample outfit of men and horses.  He had also anticipated the dropping of calves and had rigged up a carrier, the box of which was open framework.  Thus until a calf was strong enough to follow, the mother, as she trailed along beside the wagon, could keep an eye on her offspring.  We made good drives the first two or three days; but after clearing the first bottoms of the Rio Grande and on reaching the tablelands, we made easy stages of ten to twelve miles a day.  When near enough to calculate on our arrival at Las Palomas, the old ranchero quit us and went on into the ranch.  Several days later a vaquero met the herd about thirty miles south of Santa Maria, and brought the information that the Valverde outfit was at the ranch, and instructions to veer westward and drive down the Ganso on approaching the Nueces.  By these orders the delivery on the home river would occur at least twenty miles west of the ranch headquarters.

As we were passing to the westward of Santa Maria, our employer and one of the buyers rode out from that ranch and met the herd.  They had decided not to brand until arriving at their destination on the Devil’s River, which would take them at least a month longer.  While this deviation was nothing to us, it was a gain to them.  The purchaser was delighted with the cattle and our handling of them, there being fully a thousand young calves, and on reaching their camp on the Ganso, the delivery was completed—­four days in advance of the specified time.  For fear of losses, we had received a few head extra, and, on counting them over, found we had not lost a single hoof.  The buyers received the extra cattle, and the delivery was satisfactorily concluded.  One of the partners returned with us to Las Palomas for the final settlement, while the other, taking charge of the herd, turned them up the Nueces.  The receiving outfit had fourteen men and some hundred and odd horses.  Aside from their commissary, they also had a calf-wagon, drawn by two yoke of oxen and driven by a strapping big negro.  In view of the big calf crop, the partners concluded that an extra conveyance would not be amiss, and on Uncle Lance making them a reasonable figure on our calf-wagon and the four mules drawing it, they never changed

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Texas Matchmaker from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.