Thirteen
For a split second, Lynnie could only watch helplessly as the big herd of longhorns milled and bawled like a great, churning brown sea. Then they broke and began to run.
“Stampede!” Ace yelled, “Goddamn it! Let's stop 'em!”
The spell was broken, and everyone ran for their horses. Lynnie ran, too, but Ace shouted at her, his face distorted with anger. “Damn it, you've caused enough trouble! Stay out of the way!”
“I caused it; I'll help stop it!” She still had a pair of bloomers in her hand as she swung up on her horse and spurred Boneyard into a gallop, running along beside the thundering herd. The chuck wagon was in the way of the rampaging cattle. She yelled a warning to Cookie, who grabbed up the last baby calf and clambered inside. As she passed, the chuck wagon trembled against the onslaught of the running brown wall and flipped over on its side. Her mare was caught in the forward momentum, and Lynnie couldn't stop to see if Cookie was all right. The most important task at this instant was stopping the panicked, headlong plunge of longhorns.
All the cowboys were in the saddle, running along the sides of cattle, trying to contain them so the herd wouldn't split and scatter over the prairie, where the wranglers might never find all the stragglers. Up ahead of her through the churning dust, she saw Pedro galloping. Then his horse stumbled and went down. The momentum flung him to one side so that he didn't fall under the pounding hooves, but the way he cried out, barely heard over the roar, told her he was hurt.
It seemed unreal, she thought. Her ears rang with noise that sounded like a tornado or a thunderstorm as thousands of hooves drummed the ground and the cattle ran on. Her mouth tasted of grit, and she felt perspiration running down her back in the evening twilight. Around her, red dust boiled up from the charging cattle so that her vision blurred and her spectacles became coated with a film of dust. There seemed to be no stopping the spooked cattle, she thought as she topped a rise and galloped down the other side. Here and there, she saw a blurred vision of hard-riding cowboys, but the longhorns charged on like a great brown wave crashing across the prairie. Far ahead of her, she saw Ace riding expertly, attempting to reach the herd leaders. Her heart almost stopped, knowing the men who reached the front of the stampede were putting themselves in grave danger, because their job was to turn the leaders, get the herd milling in confusion so that they stopped running. Sometimes, she knew, the riders trying to stop the lead steers were caught in the whirlwind and fell beneath the steers as they began to mill.
She wasn't going to let that happen to Ace. This stampede was her fault, and she had a fast horse. She urged Boneyard forward, and now they were running neck and neck with Ace and his great black stallion.
Ace looked first surprised and then angry as he glanced to one side and saw her. “Get the hell back!” He waved her away.
She hesitated, then decided to ignore him. She had a good horse and she was an expert rider. In answer, she passed Ace, shouting and waving her bloomers at the cattle. For a heart-stopping moment, she was ahead of the longhorns, seeing the whites of their eyes rolling in terror, their great horns flashing in the last rays of sunlight, dust churning up in a great red cloud. “Ha!” she shouted, and waved her drawers at the cattle. “Ha! Get back there!”
“You little idiot!” Ace was beside her, shooting his pistol to turn the herd. Around the other side came Hank and Comanch, their guns echoing above the thunder of the herd. The cattle hesitated, bawling, then began to mill in confusion, those behind the leaders stumbling as the leaders stopped.
Cattle almost always mill to the right.
Lynnie remembered the tales she had heard from old-timers. Knowing that, she reined her horse to follow the leaders and prevent them from starting off again. The cattle appeared as startled as the cowboys when Lynnie waved her underwear.
If they broke the mill and started running again, she and her tired horse would be swept under the longhorns as they charged toward her. Her horse reared, neighing, and Lynnie had never been so scared in her life. If she went down under the great brown mass, they wouldn't find enough of her to bury.
Ace fired his pistol again, charging into the mill. “Hah! Get back there! Hah, cows!”
The cattle hesitated, dusty and lathered with sweat as were the horses, but they began to mill in confusion as the other wranglers caught up with the leaders, cracking their whips, forcing the cattle to stop. Now the herd was a churning, bawling mass, but the stampede was over. Within minutes, the tired cattle were barely moving, lathered and blowing as the cowboys began to sing, soothing the frightened beasts.
Lynnie sighed with relief as she rode off to one side and reined in her horse. There she dismounted and leaned against her saddle, trembling violently as she suddenly realized how close she'd come to death.
Ace galloped up. “Damn you, you nearly got us all killed!” He swung down off his horse, whirled her around, and looked into her face, suddenly concerned. “Are you all right?”
She tried to hold back the tears but couldn't stop herself. “I didn't go to do it,” she sobbed. “It just haâhaâhappened.”
“Oh hell, I know you didn't go to do it, silly female.” He pulled her to him awkwardly and stroked her hair. “It'll be all right.”
“The chuck wagon,” she sobbed against his big chest. “I saw the chuck wagon go over and Pedro go down.”
He swore and stepped away, then swung up on his horse. “Nothin' but trouble on this drive,” he muttered, and put spurs to his lathered horse and galloped back down the line.
Yes, she had been nothing but trouble. She couldn't blame him for being furious. She felt so alone and vulnerable now, remembering the comfort of his arms. With a sigh, she wiped her eyes and mounted up, following him to see how bad the damage was. Here she'd been trying to prove that women could do things as well as men, and she'd messed it all up. With eyes downcast, she rode past the cowboys who were now rounding up the strays from the stampede. How they must hate her.
Pedro's horse stood ground-tied where the Mexican had fallen. Ace had propped him up against a stump. She dismounted and ran to join them. “Oh, Pedro, I'm so sorry. I didn't meanâ”
“It's all right,
señorita.”
He nodded. “I was just tellin' the boy here, I'm not hurt bad, I think.”
Ace was examining him. “He's got a broken leg. He's not going to be able to ride. I'll get him some whiskey.”
They all looked toward the chuck wagon.
“Thunderation.” Lynnie stood up. “We forgot about Cookie.”
Ace's dark eyes betrayed his fear. “That old bastard is too pickled to be hurt.”
“I heered that!” came from the overturned wagon.
Lynnie laughed with relief, and Ace grinned. “He must not be hurt too bad.”
They both ran over and peered inside. Cookie lay sprawled among overturned flour and sugar canisters, with four beribboned calves bawling in protest.
“You hurt?” Lynnie asked.
“Dagnab it, nothin' but my dignity,” the old man complained.
Hank and some of the others rode up.
Ace said, “Help me get this chuck wagon back on its wheels, and then we'll see what we can do about Pedro.”
Tired, dusty men dismounted. “Pedro hurt bad?”
She felt shame and chewed her lip as Ace said, “We'll have to send him back. Pedro can't ride with a broke leg.”
“I'm sorry,” Lynnie said. “I'm really sorry.”
Ace shrugged. “It's our fault for lettin' a female come along. Women don't belong on a cattle drive.”
“Aw, Ace,” Hank said, “go easy on the lady. She didn't go to do it.”
“That don't make me no never-mind,” Ace snapped. “She's still caused a big mess. Hold on, Cookie,” he shouted, “we're fixin' to get the wagon up on its wheels.”
As she watched, Ace put his strong back into his lift as the other cowboys rushed to help. In seconds, they had righted the wagon, and it didn't seem badly damaged.
Ace peered inside. “Cookie, you hurt?”
“No, but these danged calves peed on me.”
“Lynnie,” Ace ordered, “get some bandages and the whiskey out of the chuck wagon.”
She peered in as Cookie moved a bawling calf off his lap. They were all covered with sugar and flour.
Cookie's eyes lit up. “There's whiskey?”
Ace grinned in spite of himself. “Knowing you, I hid it in the liniment bottle.”
“Well, that's a damned dirty trickâexcuse my language, Miss Lynnie. At least my bottle of vanilla ain't broke.” He began to dust the spilled flour off the bawling calves while the anxious cows clustered around the wagon.
Daisy Buttercup looked like a ghost, but she complained mightily as Cookie dusted off the flour and Lynnie picked her up and put her on the ground for her anxious mother. Then she searched out the bandages and the liniment bottle, then followed Ace back to where Comanch squatted by the injured trail boss. Lynnie held out the bottle, and Pedro took a big swig.
Ace asked, “How bad is it,
compadre?
”
Pedro wiped sweat from his swarthy face. “It hurts, but if I get it bandaged, I think I can go on.”
Lynnie exchanged glances with Ace. Ace looked beaten. For the first time, his wide shoulders seemed to slump. If Pedro had a broken leg, they both knew he wouldn't be able to sit a horse.
“Lynnie, go find me some sticks we can use as a splint. I thought we passed a cottonwood tree back there somewheres. Joe, you tell the boys to meet at the chuck wagon in about an hour so we can assess the damage and decide what we're gonna do next.”
Lynnie glanced around. All the boys looked depressed.
This is the end of the drive,
she thought,
and it's all my fault.
Without an experienced trail boss like Pedro, they would have to cut short the trip and go home like defeated hound dogs with their tails between their legs. True, Cookie had made the trip before, but with his taste for anything alcoholic, they couldn't count on him to lead them. In the meantime, Willis Forrester and Purdy would get top dollar for their beef in Dodge City and return to Texas in triumph.
She rode back and found some fallen branches that could be cut up for a splint. Following Pedro's instructions, the novice hands helped straighten the leg and bandage it. Then some of the cowboys put the injured man on a blanket and carried him back to camp. In the meantime, Cookie had gotten a fire started and a big pot of coffee boiling.
The old geezer was coated with flour until he looked like a spook, but he seemed cheerful. “Boys tell me one steer got kilt in the stampede, so we got steak if anyone's hungry.”
The cowboys grinned.
Hank said, “You ever see a cowboy not hungry?”
After a hearty meal and some broth for Pedro, the wranglers gathered around the fire to talk as darkness fell. Lynnie was so ashamed, she couldn't look at any of the men.
“I think I could sit a saddle,” Pedro said, and nobody else said anything, knowing the pain would be unbearable.
Ace shook his head.
“Gracias, compadre,
but you'd never make it. Is there a railroad anywheres near?”
Pedro thought a minute and nodded. “A few miles to the east. It connects with a stage line farther south. Why?”
Ace chewed his lip, thinking. “I reckon we'll have to put you on the train.”
“But there's no experienced trail driver but me,” the Mexican protested. “If you send me home, you'll have to end the drive.”
A moan of protests went up from the boys. “No! We ain't gonna yell âcalf-roped' and let that uppity Forrester and Purdy win this thing!”
“I don't know that we got much choice,” Ace said.
There was a long silence. It was so quiet that Lynnie thought the sound of the fire crackling seemed very loud.
Ace rolled a smoke and lit it with a burning twig from that fire. “Lordy,” he said softly, “I wish now that when my dad was tryin' to teach me about bein' a rancher, I'd paid more attention. I don't know beans.”
Pedro gave him a fond, gentle smile. “It's in your blood. The Durangos have been ranchers for generations. You got what it takes, amigo. Someday yet, you will be a good cattleman.”
Ace shook his head. “Now is when I'm needed, and I ain't got the goods.” He stood up abruptly and went out on the prairie, staring up at the stars.
Lynnie had never felt so sorry for anyone as she did for Ace Durango at this moment.
Pedro shook his head. “He feels bad about himself.”
“He shouldn't,” Lynnie said stubbornly “I'm the one who caused the stampede. I owe you all an apology.”
“Gosh, Miss Lynnie,” Comanche said, “none of the boys hold it against you. You didn't go to do it, and you risked your life to help stop it.”
“That doesn't make me feel any better.” She took off her spectacles, put them in her pocket, and wiped the tears that threatened to overflow her eyes.
“Well, Pedro . . .” Hank looked around at the other cowboys. “What are we gonna do?”
The old man shook his head. “Much as I hate to admit it, Ace is right. I can't ride, so I'll be a burden to you, and you can't go on without a trail boss. Maybe we could turn over our cows to the Forrester drive, all of us catch that train if the railroad can work out credit with the Triple D.”
Lynnie protested. “Willis Forrester would send Daisy Buttercup to the butcher.”
The calf, as if recognizing its name, bawled loudly, and the men laughed.