When the Legends Die (13 page)

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Authors: Hal Borland

BOOK: When the Legends Die
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Thomas drove the team up to the corner and around and back down the alley to an open shed where Albert Left Hand was waiting. Thomas unloaded the stinking pelts and piled them as Albert Left Hand directed. Then Albert Left Hand gave him a nickel. “For the pop,” he said. He took charge of the team and Thomas went back the way he had come, to the main street.

He didn’t know where to get the pop. Looking, he came to the saddlery shop. In the window was the most beautiful saddle he had ever seen, ornately tooled and polished till it shone. He stared at it, admiring with all his heart. Then he saw the bridle hanging from the saddle horn. It was a black and white horsehair bridle with long round-braided reins. He recognized that bridle. It was a bridle he had made, with a pattern he had thought up. It had a price tag. Five dollars. He gasped. Five dollars! He hadn’t got anything for it because it was work he was assigned to do, schoolwork, and when it was sold to a trader the money went to pay for his keep.

He stared at the bridle and the price tag, and his eyes returned to the saddle. There was no price tag on the saddle. It cost too much to say, he decided. But if the bridle was worth five dollars, and if he could make bridles and sell them, then some day he could buy that saddle. He didn’t have a pony for the saddle, but some day he could buy a pony, too.

He was still there in front of the window, staring at the saddle, when two cowhands came out of the nearest saloon. They talked loud and laughed. They saw the boy and the tall, slim one jabbed a thumb into Thomas’s ribs and demanded, “What’s your name?”

Thomas stepped back and tried to hurry away, but the cowhand caught his arm. “I asked what’s your name?”

“Thomas.”

“All right, Tom. Want to earn a quarter?” He winked at his dark-haired companion.

Thomas didn’t answer.

“Know how to ride a horse?” the cowhand asked. “Sure you do. All Indian kids do.” He drew a quarter from his pocket. “Look, Tom. You go get my horse and ride it back here and I’ll give you this quarter.”

Tom stared at the quarter. He had never owned a quarter. This man was offering him a quarter just to ride a horse. He looked at the cowhand again, wide-eyed, and started to leave.

The cowhand caught his arm again. “Just a minute! Get the right horse or you don’t get the quarter. The black gelding with a one-ear bridle and a red and white saddle blanket. He’s hitched right down there in the cottonwoods.”

Again Thomas started to leave, and again the cowhand caught his arm. “Ride him. Don’t try to lead him. Understand? He don’t lead very well.” His companion laughed.

Free at last, Thomas hurried down the street. He found the horse, hitched by a neck rope. It was so skittish he had to drive it around the tree until the rope was wound tight. Then he snubbed the reins to the saddle horn, untied the rope, got his foot in the stirrup. The horse danced away, but he swung into die saddle as it began buck-jumping. With the reins snubbed it couldn’t get its head down, but it buck-jumped in a circle among the trees before he knew he could ride it, knew he had its rhythm and his own balance. Then he gave it a little slack in the reins and it bucked viciously a time or two before he got it headed up the street. Still holding its head high with the snubbed reins, he rode it to the waiting cowhands. He got off and handed the reins to the one who had sent him on the errand.

The cowhand growled, “You snubbed the reins. You didn’t let him buck.”

His companion laughed. “He brought the horse, didn’t he? He rode him. Pay up, Slim. And let’s
see you
ride him.”

Slim gave the quarter to Tom. A little knot of men had gathered and someone asked what was going on. The short, dark-haired cowhand grinned. “Slim sent the kid to bring his horse. Now Slim’s going to ride him. Unless he’s afraid to.”

Slim laughed. “I can ride anything with hair and four legs.”

“Well, prove it, man. Get in that saddle and prove it.”

Slim shortened the reins in his left hand, caught the saddle horn and reached for the near stirrup. The horse shied, tossed its head, got slack in the reins. Slim swung into the saddle, but before he hit the seat the horse ducked its head and began to buck. Slim couldn’t find the other stirrup. He didn’t have a chance. Three jumps and he was loose. The fourth jump sent him sprawling.

Someone caught the horse and brought it back. Slim got to his feet, cursing, dusted himself and picked up his hat. He limped back to the sidewalk. His companion, laughing, asked, “Want another try, or shall I put the boy on again?”

“Go to hell!”

The dark-haired one turned to Thomas. “I’ll give you a dollar if you ride that horse again. Without snubbing the reins.”

Thomas hesitated. But he had ridden the horse once, knew its rhythm. And it had worked off some of its meanness. And a dollar, a whole dollar!

He took the reins, gave them one turn around his left hand and reached for the saddle horn. He got his left foot in the stirrup and swung up as the horse shied around. He found the other stirrup and held the horse’s head up for one jump while he settled himself. Then he tightened his knees beneath the pommel, let the horse have slack in the reins and rode with the buck. The horse came down stiff-legged and went into a twisting, jolting series of bucks. He rode as he had ridden the unbroken ponies on the sagebrush flats. The horse eased for a moment, then bucked and side-lunged halfway up the block. He kept his seat and it began to subside. Then he put it to a stiff-legged trot. It tossed its head and wanted to run, but he held it in and rode to the end of the block, then turned and came back in a series of short, jolting jumps.

Thomas got off and handed the reins to die dark-haired cowhand, who gave him a silver dollar. Then, both proud of himself and embarrassed, he squirmed through the crowd to get away.

At the edge of the crowd a wiry red-haired man in Levi’s and worn fancy-stitched boots stopped him. “You’re quite a rider, son,” he said. He had a crooked nose and a week’s growth of rusty beard. “What’s your name?”

“Thomas.”

The man sized him up. “How old are you?”

“Fourteen, I guess.”

“From the reservation?”

“Yes.” Thomas wanted to get away from the crowd. The red-haired man did too. They edged down the street together.

“How would you like to learn to be a real bronc twister?”

Thomas hesitated.

“I’ll teach you. How about working for me?”

“I haven’t got a permit.”

“Your pa in town?”

“My father is dead. I am with Albert Left Hand. I help him with the sheep.”

“That fat old man that stinks of sheep? The one in the cafe?” The man grinned. “A boy like you herding sheep! It’s time you and me got together. I’ve got a place down in New Mexico, the other side of the reservation. I’ve got a whole string of bad horses that you can ride.” He laughed. “You just throw in with Red Dillon and we’ll both go places.”

“I haven’t got a permit,” Thomas said again.

The man winked. “I’ll tend to the permit. The agency’s right on our way. You got a pony?”

“No.”

“I’ve got a spare. How’d you get to town? Walk?”

“I came in the wagon with Albert Left Hand. I have to tell him.”

“Come on, I’ll tell him.”

They went to the cafe. Albert Left Hand was alone at the far end of the counter. Nobody wanted to sit near him because of the way he smelled. Red Dillon went to Albert and said he had hired the boy and was taking Thomas home with him. Albert Left Hand didn’t even look up. He took another big bite of raisin pie, chewed for a moment, then growled, “Boys come, boys go. That one’s no good.”

Red Dillon grinned and they turned away. “We ought to eat before we go,” he said to Thomas. “Me giving you a job, you ought to treat. Money’s no good in your pocket.”

So they found stools at the near end of the counter, well away from Albert Left Hand, and Red Dillon ordered chili and coffee for both of them. Then they had doughnuts and more coffee, making an even dollar’s worth. Thomas gave Red his dollar and Red paid the man at the end of the counter.

Red’s horses were on the far side of the Cottonwood grove at the end of the street. Both were saddled, but the saddle on the black had no horn and a tarp-covered bedroll was lashed across it. Red tightened the cinches and tied the bedroll back of the saddle. He saw Thomas puzzling. “Never see a saddle like this?” he asked. “This here’s a bronc saddle, for rodeoing. If a bronc comes over backwards onto you, there’s no horn to punch a hole in your guts. If you get throwed frontwards by a mean bucker there’s no horn to hang you up by your chap strings. That’s why the horn’s sawed off. You’re going to see a lot of this saddle, Tom.” He swung into the saddle on the sorrel, a conventional saddle with a horn. “Let’s go. Let’s get that permit and head for my place.”

Tom mounted the black and settled himself in the bronc saddle, and they headed down the road south, toward the agency.

III.
The Arena
22

R
ED GOT THE PERMIT
without any trouble. It was a formality that the agent was glad to have done with in a hurry. For his records, it solved the whole problem of Thomas Black Bull.

Then Tom and Red Dillon got on the horses again and rode on south, pushing to get off the reservation that evening. The sun had set before they crossed into New Mexico, but they rode for another hour before they stopped, hobbled the horses, divided the bedroll and made a supperless camp. The next morning they rode on, across rolling flats which were much like the land on the reservation except that there was more grass.

Early afternoon and Red said, “Now we’re on my range. Another couple of hours and we’ll be home. Some folks might not think it’s much to look at, but it’s a roof and a bed, and old Meo keeps the cook pot going. I will say this,” he laughed, “it don’t stink of sheep!”

Mirages shimmered and vanished ahead of them and shimmered again on the next rise. “Grass enough here,” Red said, with a sweeping gesture, “for a real layout, if I ever figure it’s worth while. I could put a thousand head of horses out here and still have grass to spare. But if I did, then I’d have to hay them in the winter. Start haying and you’ve got to have help. Help eats up all the profits, so I keep my layout small, so me and Meo can handle it.”

And a little later he said, “You’ll like Meo. He’s an old chili-eater and he don’t have much to say, but he’s all right. Used to be quite a rider himself, till a bronc fell on him eight, ten years ago. Broke something in his back and he’s got a hump on his shoulders now. You ever ride in a rodeo, Tom?”

“No.”

“Ever seen one?”

“No.”

“Well, you will. Things go right, we may go to the show in Aztec next month. We’ll go a lot of places, Tom, and we’ll get paid for it. We’ll make them pay.” He laughed. “I got euchered in Mancos last week, but I’ve got a feeling my luck’s turned. Yes sir, I think my luck has turned.”

Midafternoon and what looked from a distance like just another wide gully began to spread out ahead of them. It was still two miles away, but Tom could see the dark green of trees. They were coming to the sharp-walled canyon of the San Juan which, picking up the water from half a dozen big creeks after it passed Pagosa, became a river that swept in a great arc down through the corner of New Mexico before it swung north again and plowed its way into Utah and the incredible canyons of the Colorado. Here it looped about like a silvery snake, hiding from the arid flatlands in a bluff-walled shallow canyon of its own.

They came to the rim of the bluff and looked down on huge old cottonwoods and lush grass where the river oxbowed between die canyon walls. A shelving trail led down the bluff. As they rode down Tom saw a weathered cabin among the trees and an unchinked log barn and a set of old pole corrals. Beyond the cabin was a garden patch, green with rows of beans and pepper plants. A bent man was hoeing in the garden.

They rode to the barn, unsaddled and turned the horses into the corral, and Red led the way to the cabin. The gnomish, leather-faced old Mexican with a hump on his shoulders put down his hoe and came to meet them.

“This is Tom, Meo,” Red said. “We’re going to teach Tom to be a bronc twister.”

Meo looked at Tom, then asked Red, “You win at Mancos?”

Red shook his head. “But my luck’s changed. Me and Tom are going to Aztec and take their shirts.”

“Maybe,” Meo said, and he turned and went back to the garden.

The cabin was one long room with a fireplace across the far end. In front of the fireplace was a plank table with two benches. Several bunks were built against one wall, and on pegs on the other wall were rawhide lariats, bridles, spare cinches, two pairs of sleek-leather chaps, assorted riding gear. There was a pile of firewood beside the fireplace, a string of red chilis hung from a beam, and on the white ashes stood a black coffeepot and a slowly simmering iron kettle.

Red tossed the bedroll on a bunk, picked up a mug and a bowl from the table and poured coffee. “Help yourself,” he said as he spooned beans and chili from the kettle. Tom got himself a bowl of chili and a cup of coffee while Red found the tortillas in the Dutch oven.

They ate in silence until Red had finished his chili and beans. He filled his bowl again and sat back to let it cool.

“Well, Tom,” he said, “the agent asked would I see to it that you had a home and learned a trade. I don’t know what he’d say about this place, but it’s a roof over your head when it rains. A cut better than a sheepherder’s tent, isn’t it?”

Tom nodded agreement and went on eating.

“And if you never have less to eat,” Red said, “I guess you won’t starve. So you’ve got a home. As for a trade, he must have meant being able to turn your hand to something that would keep you out of the poorhouse. Well, I never been in the poorhouse, and I don’t plan to be. You stick with me and I guess you’ll make out.” His eyes went to the chaps and bridles and cinches hanging on the wall. “We’ll both make out.” He smiled to himself, then saw that Tom had finished his chili. “Help yourself to some more, fiat up. Put some gristle in your gut. You’ll need it, because you’re going to start learning that trade tomorrow.”

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