She took a short step down and set the stool next to the house. “I’ll be back,” she said.
As she stood up, Fielding appreciated her figure in the dark gray dress. Then she was gone again, and he took his seat on the stool, resting his back against the house as he held the lead rope in his left hand and the reins in his right. Both horses were relaxed, and the barnyard animals had quieted down. Though the immediate surroundings were homely, the spot had a peaceful quality to it.
The door opened, and the girl set a chair on the step. A few seconds later she returned with a cutting board, a knife, and a chunk of meat that looked like a venison haunch.
“There’s not many flies yet,” she said. “I thought I could work outside here.”
“That’s good. You can keep those geese from doin’ me any harm.”
She smiled and showed her clean, even teeth. “Oh, they’re something, aren’t they? But that’s geese.” With the board in her lap, she positioned the chunk of meat and sliced off a thin strip lengthwise.
“Makin’ jerky?”
“That’s right. It’s antelope meat. Papa says they’re good this time of the year, when the grass comes green.” She glanced up from her work. “So, you live over this way, do you?”
“I have a camp is all. I’m a packer, so I’m on the trail a good part of the time, when the weather allows.”
Her dark eyes looked at him again. “I think we’ve met. Or seen each other. I’m Isabel, you know.”
He took off his hat, but she didn’t seem to notice the courtesy, so he dragged his cuff across his forehead. “And I’m Tom, as I already mentioned.”
“Sure.” She pulled the knife through the haunch and cut off a long, thin piece. “I think Bill Selby mentioned you just yesterday when he came by.”
Fielding shifted on his stool. “It was a little thing that happened, but everyone seems to have heard of it.”
“I think Bill came over here to tell Papa just as soon as he could. He made you out to seem like the rescuer.”
“Like I say, it wasn’t much.”
She paused in her work and let her eyes meet his. “Do you think those other men mean trouble? Bill seemed shaken by it.”
Fielding rotated his hat in his hands. “I don’t know what all they said before or after I was there. I just saw them pushin’ him around, and I didn’t think it was fair. If there’s something bigger behind it, I’m yet to know.”
“But you stuck your neck out. That’s what Bill said. I know he appreciated it.”
“I’m glad he did. I don’t think the other side did, though.”
“But you stood up for him, see? That’s good.”
He felt relaxed with her, and his words came easy. “Oh, I don’t know. I think I’m just innocent enough to believe that there are still things like right and wrong and that decency can come out on top. It’s just that it’s hard to do without causing some kind of friction.”
She cut another long slice, then flipped it to the side with her knife. “You’ve got to do what you think is right. You’ve got to be your own man.” She looked across at him and smiled.
“Well, you’re right, of course. What I want is to be left alone, free to live the way I want, but like I say, I tend to make it rough on myself.”
“Maybe you do, a little bit. But I’d rather do that and be able to be myself, not have a lot of people hanging all over me.” Her voice changed tone as she said, “Don’t worry about her.”
“Huh?”
Isabel pointed with her knife, and Fielding turned to see a young brown goat, about a yearling, with bulging yellow eyes.
“She likes tobacco.”
“Well, I don’t have any.”
The young nanny looked at Fielding’s shirt, then at the two horses.
“Go away, Missy,” said Isabel. “No treats today.”
The goat stood still.
Isabel spoke again as she returned to her work. “So, do you always travel with two horses?”
“Um, no.”
“I don’t mean to be inquisitive. Just something to talk about.” She looked up, and her dun complexion had a blush. “Really, I talk too much. But just at first. Hardly anyone ever comes here, and if they do, it’s like Bill Selby. They come to talk to Papa.”
“And give tobacco to the goat?”
Isabel laughed.
Fielding realized the girl might be a little nervous or giddy about having a visitor like him, but he felt an easy familiarity with her. He said, “Anyway, to answer your question, the reason I look like Ranger Two Ponies is that I picked up this one horse where my helper left it in town.”
“Oh, I see. And you’re taking it back to your place.” Her voice was calmer now.
“Unless something comes up.”
She looked at him without raising her head all the way. “Oh, are you a horse trader, too?”
“No, but the world is full of genies and spirits, and one of them might bewitch me.”
Her eyes sparkled as she smiled at him. “Like sailors and mermaids.”
He smiled back. “Maybe so. I’ve heard it said that a cowpuncher is a sailor on horseback.”
“So, you’re a cowpuncher?”
“I’ve done that kind of work.”
She tipped her head in a matter-of-fact way. “I like to ride,” she said. Then, as if emending, she added, “But that’s nothing like cow-punching, I know that. You have to ride long and hard, know how to rope and trip steers, keep from breaking your neck.”
“That, and live on cold biscuits. Boil your coffee in a little can.”
She pursed her lips. “And jerky.”
“Oh, I know,” he conceded. “A fella carries raisins, dried apples, canned tomatoes. I was just makin’ myself to be a lone sufferer for the moment.”
“I’m sure it’s not easy.” Her voice changed again. “Well, what did I tell you? Here’s Papa now.”
Fielding followed the motion of her head toward the east, where Andrew Roe on horseback came down a grassy hill. Fielding recognized the horse, an older chestnut that did not move very fast. Fielding stood up and put on his hat.
Isabel resumed her work, and neither she nor Fielding spoke as her father made his way to the ranch yard.
Andrew Roe stopped his horse. “Been here long?” he asked as he eased down from the saddle.
“Not long,” said Fielding. “Ten, fifteen minutes.”
Isabel rose from her chair and carried the cutting board with the knife and meat into the house.
“What news?” asked Roe. He stood by the horse as it drooped its head. The man was of medium height and slender build, and he wore loose clothes. His hat had nicks in the brim and a hole worn in the ridge of the crown, and it cast a shadow on his eyes, which in turn had permanent shadows below them. As usual, the man had a couple of days’ stubble on his face, set off by a knotted kerchief that could use a wash.
“Not much news from me,” said Fielding. “Least, nothin’ you haven’t heard.”
Roe said something like “Yuh” and moistened his lips. His pale brown eyes, which had a tendency to drift, came back to Fielding. “I was just over to Selby’s now,” he went on. “Talkin’ about work.”
“ ’Bout that time.”
Roe moved his mouth and then spoke. “Him and me, we’re thinkin’ of havin’ our own roundup.”
“I believe Lodge mentioned something like that when I saw him.”
Isabel came out the front door. She walked forward, took the reins from her father, and led the horse away.
Roe dug into the pocket of his cloth vest and brought out a sack of tobacco. He looked down at his work as he spoke. “The Association doesn’t control that anymore, so no one can tell us otherwise. A couple of others might throw in with us—you mentioned Lodge—and we’d like to have another hand or two.” Roe twisted his mouth as he rolled the cigarette tight with his fingers. Then he licked the edge and folded it down.