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"You stay home, an' don't worry about me," replied the foreman, riding off.
"I don't like to see him go alone," Hopalong muttered. "He may get a raw deal down there. But if he does we'll wipe 'em off'n th' earth."
"Mamma! Look there!" softly cried Johnny, staring towards the other side of the plateau, where Mary Meeker rode past. Red and Skinny were astonished and Johnny and Hopalong pretended to be; but all removed their sombreros while she remained in sight. Johnny was watching Hopalong's face, but when Red glanced around he was staring over the hill.
"Gosh, ain't she a ripper!" he exclaimed softly.
"She is," admitted Skinny. "She sh.o.r.e is."
Hopalong rubbed his nose reflectively and turned to Red. "Did you ever notice how pretty a freckle is?"
Red stared, for he had only toleration for the fair s.e.x, and his friend continued:
"Take a purty girl an' stick a freckle on her nose an' it sort of takes yore breath."
Red grinned. "I ain't never took a purty girl an' stuck a freckle on her nose, so I can't say."
Hopalong flushed at the laughter and Skinny cried, joyously: "She's got two of us already! Meeker's got us licked if he'll let her show herself once in a while. Oh, these young fellers! Nothing can rope 'em so quick as a female, an' th' purtier she is th' quicker she can do it."
A warning light came into Hopalong's eyes. "n.o.body in this outfit'll go back on Buck for all th' purty women in th' world!"
"Good boy!" thought Johnny.
"We've got to watch th' Kid, just th' same," laughed Skinny.
"I'll knock yore head off!" cried Johnny. "You're sore 'cause you know you ain't got no chance with women while me an' Hoppy are around!"
Red looked critically at Hopalong and snickered. "If we've got to look like him to catch th' women, thank G.o.d we don't want 'em!"
"Is that so!" retorted Hopalong.
"Say," drawled Skinny. "Wouldn't th' Kid look nice hobbled with matrimony? That is, after he grows up."
"You go to th' devil!"
"Gee, Kid, you look bloodthirsty," laughed Red. "You can fool them Greasers easy if you looks like that."
"You go to," Johnny retorted, swinging into the saddle. "I'm going along th' line to see what's loose."
"I'll lick you when I see you again!" shouted Red, grinning.
Johnny turned and twirled his fingers at his red-haired friend. "Yah, you ain't man enough!"
"Johnny's gettin' more hungry for a fight every day," Hopalong remarked. "He's itching for one."
"So was you a few years back, an' you ain't changed none," replied Red. "You used to ride around looking for fights."
"To hear you talk, anybody'd think you was a Angel of Peace," Hopalong retorted.
"One's as bad as th' other, so shut up," Skinny remarked, going into the house for a drink.
CHAPTER X
BUCK VISITS MEEKER
As Buck rode south he went over the boundary trouble in all its phases, and the more he thought about it the firmer his resolution grew to hold the line at any cost. He had gone to great expense and labor to improve the water supply in the valley and he saw no reason why the H2 could not do the same; and to him an agreement was an agreement, and ran with the land. What Meeker thought about it was not the question--the point at issue was whether or not the H2 could take the line and use the valley, and if they could they were welcome to it.
But while there was any possibility for a peaceable settlement it would be foolish to start fighting, for one range war had spread to alarming proportions and had been costly to life and property. Then there was the certainty that once war had begun, rustling would develop. But, be the consequences what they might, he would fight to the last to hold that which was rightfully his. He was not going to Meeker to beg a compromise, or to beg him to let the valley alone; he was riding to tell the H2 foreman what he could expect if he forced matters.
When he rode past the H2 corrals he was curiously regarded by a group of punchers who lounged near them, and he went straight up to them without heeding their frowns.
"Is Meeker here?"
"No, he ain't here," replied Curley, who was regarded by his companions as being something of a humorist.
"Where is he?"
"Since you asks, I reckon he's in th' bunk house," Curley replied.
"Where he ought to be," he added, pointedly, while his companions grinned.
"That's wise," responded Buck. "He ought to stay there more often. I hope his cows will take after him. Much obliged for th' information,"
he finished, riding on.
"His cows an' his punchers'll do as they wants," a.s.serted Curley, frowning.
"Excuse me. I reckoned _he_ was boss around here," Buck apologized, a grim smile playing about his lips. "But you better change that 'will'
to 'won't' when you mean th' valley."
"I mean _will_!" Curley retorted, leaping to his feet. "An' what's more, I ain't through with that game laig puncher of yourn, neither."
Buck laughed and rode forward again. "You have my sympathy, then," he called over his shoulder.
Buck stopped before the bunk house and called out, and in response to his hail Jim Meeker came and stood in the door.
The H2 foreman believed he was right, and he was too obstinate to admit that there was any side but his which should be considered. He wanted water and better gra.s.s, and both were close at hand. Where he had been raised there had been no boundaries, for it had been free gra.s.s and water, and he would not and could not see that it was any different on his new range. He had made no agreement, and if one had been made it did not concern him; it concerned only those who had made it. He did not buy the ranch from the old owners, but from a syndicate, and there had been nothing said about lines or restrictions. When he made any agreements he lived up to them, but he did not propose to observe those made by others.
"How'dy, Meeker," said Buck, nodding.
"How'dy, Peters; come in?"
"I reckon it ain't worth while. I won't stay long," Buck replied. "I came down to tell you that some of yore cows are crossing our line.
They're gettin' worse every day."
"That so?" asked Meeker, carelessly.