Wil Dow heard Uncle Bill Sewall say to Pierce Bolan, “When he was little they called him ‘Teedy’ and his late wife took to calling him that. She called him ‘Teedy’ until she died. Since then he hasn’t allowed it. Doesn’t want anybody calling him that name—reminds him of Alice Lee, I expect. He hates the nickname now. You want to start a fight with him, just call him ‘Teddy.’”
“Hell, why would I want to start a fight with a sick little dude like that?”
Fires were kindled and irons brought out, unbranded beasts of all ages were lassoed with leather riatas and dragged forward one at a time, and from the branded and cauterized calves came a pitiful blatting.
Toward evening came the tallying and gathering. Yet another new herd was formed: these were the cattle destined for market—each beef identified by brand and written down as a slash-mark on its owner’s page in the wagon-boss’s tally book. This herd, Pierce Bolan told him, would grow daily and would need constant fresh graze.
The rest of the cattle were turned loose and chased back into the country that had already been swept, so that they wouldn’t be rounded up a second time.
It was near dark when the riders found their way to the Huidekoper wagon. They exercised their teeth on stringy freshkilled beef.
Bill Sewall said, “I’m awful tired.”
“Don’t be peevish, Uncle Bill.”
Johnny Goodall came by, making his rounds. He was riding a buckskin mare with three white stockings. He observed the determination with which Roosevelt’s jaws worked on a mouthful. “Afraid this isn’t exactly your Delmonico restaurant.”
“It tastes jolly good to me.”
“I swear I don’t know what you’re doing here.”
“Looking after my interests, old fellow.”
“Go on home, Mr. Roosevelt. There’s men here who can do that a lot better than you can.”
“I shan’t know that until I’ve tried. And I shan’t learn much if I don’t try.”
“You’re too rich for round-up camp, Mr. Roosevelt. Don’t you see that?”
“Will it satisfy you if I explain that I scorn the slothful ease of the mollycoddled?”
“Well then,” said Johnny, “you’ll just suit yourself, I guess. You just keep on hastening forward quickly there.” A rare smile crossed his face before he rode away.
Everyone knew that Roosevelt had to prove himself to Johnny Goodall. The challenge Johnny had set him—regarding the stockmen’s association and who should be chosen to lead it—was common knowledge on the round-up, and Wil Dow knew that everyone was waiting to see if sickly little “Silk-Stocking Roosenfelder” could possibly survive the next two months’ gruelling labor and show the Texan that he was wrong.
It didn’t begin well for Mr. Roosevelt. Not only did he have to endure it with good nature every time a cow hand ragged him with a hearty “Hasten forward quickly there”—some of them even managed pretty well to mimic his odd Eastern dialect—but then on the third day, after his first assignment on night-herding duty, he came riding into camp in early sunlight, blinking perplexedly behind his glasses. “By Jove, I seem to have been lost. I was trying to find the night herd and it was so pitch-dark I must have got started in the wrong direction.”
A hand—one of Johnny Goodall’s men—squinted wearily at the dude. “I had to stand double guard because of you, Mr. Roosevelt. Believe I must’ve lullabied a thousand cows with one chorus apiece of ‘Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie.’ You going to do something about that?”
“I’ll stand your next night guard. It’s the only fair thing.”
“You bet you will,” the hand agreed.
After that the boys were even more cool to him. Before, they had teased him; now they avoided him. Wil kept hearing their criticisms—uttered behind Roosevelt’s back:
“Greenhorn got himself lost inside half a mile of camp. I hear at home he needs a map and a lantern to find the outhouse.”
“Appears to me like he’s got more teeth than a man needs.”
“How can you trust a man don’t drink or smoke or swear?”
“He won’t last out the first two weeks. The booger’ll get sick or for certain he’ll get himself a gallopin’ case of cold feet in hot country.”
There were days when Roosevelt rode in, trail-worn and wilted, only to have to saddle a fresh horse and go straight out to nightherding, where twice Wil Dow ventured out with his uncle to keep an eye on the boss and they found him, thinking he was alone, giving way to violent attacks of asthma and cholera morbus. There were days when his hands bled, raw from the rope, and he kept pulling his glasses off to wipe his face because of the scalding sweat that stung his eyes. And still the boys ridiculed him, and Johnny Goodall did nothing to curb it.
They learned quickly enough that the buckskins they’d bought from the Indians were the only things worth wearing in the brush, for the thorn bushes could wear out a pair of good stout duck pants in two days.
Wil hated it when he drew the middle shift of night-riding; it interrupted his rest and got him so keyed up he couldn’t get back to sleep.
“Quiet one, at least,” said Pierce Bolan one night as their paths intersected. “The ones you want to look out for’s the loud nights—lighting, thunder. Ain’t nothing on earth half as deadly as a night stampede. Lost both my brothers in a stampede—night before we crossed the Red River.”
They all were young men, with one or two exceptions like Dutch Reuter; nobody knew just how old Dutch was—possibly in his forties or fifties. Bill Sewall was thirty-nine years old and the hands called him The Old Man. Sewall was sometimes in a frame of mind to declaim poetry in a very loud voice with his Down-East accent. It caused a good deal of ribbing and laughing. Uncle Bill didn’t seem to mind. He was sure of himself, to the annoyance of the Westerners; he was never too bashful to tell them how wrong they all were. He said to Johnny Goodall, “The stock business is still new here and I can’t find anybody as has made anything in it. They all expect to—but I think they have all lost money. Even your Markee.”
As for Dutch Reuter, Wil had developed a keen respect and liking for his cowboy mentor. Dutch had earned that rare encomium from Roosevelt “a capital fellow.” Roosevelt seemed much taken by the fact that Dutch, who could not read or write, could retain in his memory long complicated lists of instructions. Uncle Bill Sewall, with characteristic dour wit, described Dutch’s English as “unspeakable” and in truth the accent sometimes made him nearly impossible to understand; but they’d learned on the ranch that you could recite a lengthy order to him and he would ride away in the morning with his pack animals and return next day to the Elkhorn after sixty miles’ round-trip ride with packsaddles filled with precisely every item on the list, even though he may have had to visit every establishment in town to fulfill them all.
But Dutch was by no means admired by everyone. Once he had been a hunting-guide partner of the surly Frank O’Donnell; Dutch was taken to be a friend, or at least an ally, of O’Donnell and his friends—Redhead Finnegan and Riley Luffsey and the other wild ruffians who had made clear their opposition to the Marquis de Morès.
The matter surfaced one noon when a large number of rifle shots was heard in the distance. It was a great fusillade but it only lasted a minute or two. A while later Dutch Reuter and Bill Sewall came separately into camp driving small pick-up herds of strays. The two men were riding parallel on converging courses but they had not been working together. Dutch turned his cattle in, unsaddled and went to the chuck wagon for dinner; he had nothing to report. Sewall said to Johnny Goodall, who happened to be eating here today, “I don’t know if it means anything but I saw Redhead Finnegan and his friends hanging around the edges of the roundup.”
“When?”
“Two hours ago.”
Johnny glanced at Dutch. “You see them too?”
Dutch looked at him, looked at Sewall, then returned his attention to his meal. He made no answer of any kind.