Sky Meadow Ranch
Duff MacCallister had left Scotland after killing the men who had killed his fiancée. Shortly after arriving in the United States, he'd moved to Wyoming, where by homesteading and purchasing the adjacent land, he'd started his ranch, which he'd named after Skye McGregor, the woman he had intended to marry. Since leaving Scotland, Duff had been exceptionally successful. Over the years, his ranch had spread out to some 100,000 acres of prime rangeland lying between the Little Bear and Big Bear creeks.
Little and Big Bear creeks were year-round sources of water, and that, plus the good natural grazing land, allowed Duff to try an experimentâintroducing Black Angus cattle. He was well familiar with the breed, for he had worked with them in Scotland. His experiment was successful, and today he was running 30,000 head of Black Angus cattle, making his ranch one of the most profitable in all of Wyoming.
Duff's operation was large enough to employ fourteen men, principal of whom was Elmer Gleason, his ranch foreman. Cowboys had to be jacks of all trades, part carpenter to keep the buildings in shape, part wheelwright to keep the wagons repaired, part blacksmith, and even part veterinarian and doctor, so as to be able to tend to wounds and illnesses of animal and man.
A couple of the cowboys, Woodward and Martin, were replacing shingles on the roof of the barn. The job was hot, and the slant of the roof made it not only uncomfortable, but a little hazardous as well, but it needed to be done.
“How you boys doin'?” Elmer asked.
When the two men looked toward the sound of his voice, they saw that he was standing on the ladder, with just his head and shoulders above the eaves of the roof.
“We're doin' fine, Elmer,” Martin said. “Why don't you crawl on up here 'n look for yourself if you are of a mind?”
“No need,” Elmer said. “I can see it just fine from here. Ain't no call for me to be crawlin' around on some roof.”
The two cowboys laughed. “Didn't think you'd much want to come up,” Martin said.
“Hey, Elmer, once we get this here roof done, what you got 'n mind for us to do next?” Woodward asked.
“What do you mean, what do I have in mind? You two boys is both full growed. Why don't you just look around and see if you can't find somethin' that you know needs a-doin'? You don't need me to tell you ever'thing that needs done, do you?”
“No, there ain't no need for you to have to find somethin' else for us. We can do it our ownself,” Woodward said. “But after we're done, you don't mind if we run into town, do you?”
“No, if all your work is done, you can go into town. I don't mind,” Elmer said. “But try 'n stay out of trouble.”
“What makes you think we'd get into trouble?” Martin asked.
“I don't know. Maybe it's because a couple weeks ago Duff had to bail the two of you out of jail.”
“Now wait a minute. That warn't none of our fault,” Woodward said. “Them two boys from the Runnin' J is the ones that started it.”
“They ain't the ones that wound up in jail. You two was. If Duff wasn't such good friends with Marshal Ferrell, more 'n likely you'd both still be there.”
“Yeah, well, you don't have to worry none 'bout us 'cause we're not goin' to do nothin' that'll cause any trouble a-tall,” Martin said.
“You better not. If you wind up in jail again, I'm goin' to tell Duff to just leave you there.”
Elmer climbed back down the ladder and was walking away from the barn when he saw one of the other cowboys coming toward him. There was a worried expression on his face.
“What's up, Dewey? Why you got such a sour look on your face?” Elmer laughed. “I reckon that's a sour look. You're so damn ugly, I can't always tell.”
“Yeah, like you're so handsome,” Dewey teased. But the smile left his face rather quickly, and the frown returned. “I was just comin' to tell you that I found two beeves that has been mostly et by wolves.”
“Damn. Well, I'm not surprised. We've had trouble with 'em before.”
“I woulda shot 'em, but they was too damn far off, 'n I couldn't get no closer without 'em hearin' me, or smellin' me, or somethin'.
“How close could you get?”
“I couldn't get no closer 'n three hunnert yards away. And hell, you can barely see âem from that far, let alone shoot one of 'em.”
“All right. Thanks for tellin' me about it. I'll let Duff know.”
“Well, yeah, Duff needs to know,” Dewey said. “But other 'n puttin' out poison, I sure as hell don't know what he can do about it.”
“Nah, we don't want to put out poison. Problem with that is, you'll wind up killin' critters you don't have no intention, or need of killin'. Like I said, we've had trouble with 'em before, and Duff has shot 'em before.”
“How's he goin' to do that? I tol' you, you can't get close enough to 'em to shoot.”
“Dewey, you was in town for the shootin' match last month, same as the rest of us, wasn't you? You seen Duff hit a bull's-eye, no bigger 'n a half dollar, from five hunnert yards away, didn't you?”
Dewey chuckled. “I sure as hell did. And I won me ten bucks, too, bettin' Wendell Forbis that Duff could do it.”
“And you really think he can't hit a wolf from three hundred yards?”
“Now that I think about it, I reckon he can.”
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Half an hour after Elmer had informed Duff of the wolf problem, he pulled his horse Sky to a halt. Sitting still in the saddle for a moment, he perused the range before him. Except for roundup and cattle drives when he would drive a herd down to the loading pens and railhead in Cheyenne, the cattle were never in one, large herd. Rather, they tended to break off into smaller groups, bound to each other within those groups as if they were family units.
Duff saw one such group gathered near the water and standing together under the shade of a cottonwood tree.
With a pair of binoculars hanging around his neck, Duff dismounted, then walked out onto a flat rock overhang. Lifting the binoculars to his eyes, he studied the open range below him. He spotted the pack of wolves at least 500 yards away, sneaking up on the cattle. Had he not been specifically looking for them, he wouldn't have even seen them.
Duff walked back to his horse, then pulled out the same Creedmoor rifle he had used during the shooting contest in town last month. He had attached a telescopic sight to the weapon.
Returning to the point he had chosen as the lookout, he lay on his stomach and wet his finger to check the windage. Using the scope, he sighted in on the lead wolf.
Duff squeezed the trigger, and the gun boomed and kicked back against his shoulder. One second later the lead wolf was sent sprawling by the impact of the heavy bullet. A tenth of a second after the strike of the bullet, the sound of the shot reached the remaining pack, but it was so far away that they were unable to connect that sound to what happened to the leader of the pack.
A second shot killed a second wolf, and the pack turned and ran away. Duff remounted and started toward the retreating wolves. The advantage was his. He was so far away the wolves didn't even know he was after them. He urged Sky into a ground-eating gallop, and after a few minutes the wolves were once again within range. He didn't even dismount, but shot from the saddle, killing two more.
It took him less than half an hour to kill every wolf in the pack. When he started back, he saw that the buzzards had already started on the first ones he had killed. He would send some men out to take care of the carcasses, but there were enough buzzards that he knew there would be little left for them to bury.
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“I told you,” Martin said when Duff came riding back. “I told you Mr. MacCallister would take care of 'em.”
“How do you know he did?”
“He's back, ain't he?”
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“I've got somethin' to ask you,” Elmer said later that same afternoon, as the two of them were having drinks at Fiddlers' Green. “Are you ever goin' to marry, Miss Parker?”
“Now why do you ask, Elmer? Are you Megan's father?”
Elmer chuckled. “No, I ain't her father, though I'd be proud to be. She's one fine woman, one of the finest women I've ever knowed. I was just wonderin' 'bout whether or not you're goin' to marry her, is all.”
“Well, you can just keep on wondering, because the truth is, I am still wondering myself.”
“Wonderin' what? If she'll have you?”
“Among other things.”
“Ha! She'll have you all right.”
“How do you know that? It seems to me like she is pretty satisfied running her own business. Why would she want to get hooked up with me?”
Elmer chuckled. “Well, now, you got me on that one, Duff. I don't have no idea in the world why she, or any woman, would be wantin' to marry up with someone like you. But Vi tells me that she thinks Miss Parker would marry you iffen you was to ever ask her. And I put a lot of store in what Vi says 'cause she's one smart woman.”
“Yes, she is. And that brings up my question. Why haven't you married Vi?”
“I ain't never asked her. In my case, it ain't somethin' I wonder about. I know she won't have me,” Elmer replied. “I'm too damn old and too set in my ways. Besides which, if I was ever goin' to get married, other than Injun married, I woulda married Janey Jensen.”
“Jensen?”
“Yeah. Most of the time I knowed her, she told me her name was Abbigail Fontaine. It warn't until we was just about to part company that she told me her real name was Janey Jensen. Turned out she was sister to a feller I rode some with, back durin' the war. Someone you know.”
“Elmer, are you talking about Smoke Jensen?”
“Yeah, Smoke Jensen is exactly who I'm talkin' about. Abbigail Fontaine, whose real name I done told you was Janey Jensen, was Smoke's sister. All the time I knowed her, she was a fancy woman, but that don't make no never mind to me. I always thought she was a good woman.”
“If she was Smoke's sister, then she came from good stock. I can see how you might have felt so about her.”
Biff Johnson came over to join them at the table. “Did you hear what happened to the Cheyenne stage?”
“The Cheyenne stage? No, I ain't heard nothin'. What about it?” Elmer asked.
“It was held up and everyone was killed; driver, shotgun guard, and all the passengers, including the woman and child.
“Biff!” Duff said anxiously. “Megan's sister was on that coach. And Jason and the young lad!”
“No, no,” Biff said, holding out his hand reassuringly. “I'm sorry, I didn't mean to get you all concerned. It wasn't the coach they were on. It happened on the northbound coach. But it was the southbound coach that came upon them, all dead.”
“'Tis bad enough to rob a coach, to take the hard-earned money of decent people,” Duff said. “But what kind of brigand would do such a thing as kill everyone on the coach?”
“I don't know the answer to that, Duff. All I know is that there are some incredibly evil people in this world. And for some reason a lot of them have decided to come west.”