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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. MANLEY'S NEW TACTICS </h2>
<p>To the east, to the south, to the north went the riders of the Wishbone,
gathering the cattle which the fires had driven afar. No rivers stopped
them, nor mountains, nor the deep-scarred coulees, nor the plains. It was
Manley's first experience in real round-up work, for his own little herd
he had managed to keep close at home, and what few strayed afar were
turned back, when opportunity afforded, by his neighbors, who wished him
well. Now he tasted the pride of ownership to the full, when a VP cow and
her calf mingled with the milling Wishbones and Double Diamonds. He was
proud of his brand, and proud of the sentiment which had made him choose
Val's initials. More than once he explained to his fellows that VP meant
Val Peyson, and that he had got it recorded just after he and Val were
engaged. He was not sentimental about her now, but he liked to dwell upon
the fact that he had been; it showed that he was capable of fine feeling.</p>
<p>More dominant, however, as the weeks passed and the branding went on,
became the desire to accumulate property—cattle. The Wishbone brand
went scorching through the hair of hundreds of calves, while the VP scared
tens. It was not right. He felt, somehow, cheated by fate. He mentally
figured the increase of his herd, and it seemed to him that it took a long
while, much longer than it should, to gain a respectable number in that
manner. He cast about in his mind for some rich acquaintance in the East
who might be prevailed upon to lend him capital enough to buy, say, five
hundred cows. He began to talk about it occasionally when the boys lay
around in the evenings.</p>
<p>“You want to ride with a long rope,” suggested Bob Royden, grinning openly
at the others. “That's the way to work up in the cow business. Capital
nothing! You don't get enough excitement buying cattle; you want to steal
'em. That's what I'd do if I had a brand of my own and all your ambitions
to get rich.”</p>
<p>“And get sent up,” Manley rounded out the situation. “No, thanks.” He
laughed. “It's a better way to get to the pen than it is to get rich, from
all accounts.”</p>
<p>Sandy Moran remembered a fellow who worked a brand and kept it up for
seven or eight years before they caught him, and he recounted the tale
between puffs at his cigarette. “Only they didn't catch him” he finished.
“A puncher put him wise to what was in the wind, and he sold out cheap to
a tenderfoot and pulled his freight. They never did locate him.” Then,
with a pointed rock which he picked up beside him, he drew a rude diagram
or two in the dirt. “That's how he done it,” he explained. “Pretty smooth,
too.”</p>
<p>So the talk went on, as such things will, idly, without purpose save to
pass the time. Shop talk of the range it was. Tales of stealing, of
working brands, and of branding unmarked yearlings at weaning time. Of
this big cattleman and that, who practically stole whole herds, and
thereby took long strides toward wealth. Range scandals grown old; range
gossip all of it, of men who had changed a brand or made one, using a
cinch ring at a tiny fire in a secluded hollow, or a spur, or a jackknife;
who were caught in the act, after the act, or merely suspected of the
crime. Of “sweat” brands, blotched brands, brands added to and altered, of
trials, of shootings, of hangings, even, and “getaways” spectacular and
humorous and pathetic.</p>
<p>Manley, being in a measure a pilgrim, and having no experience to draw
upon, and not much imagination, took no part in the talk, except that he
listened and was intensely interested. Two months of mingling with men who
talked little else had its influence.</p>
<p>That fall, when Manley had his hay up, and his cattle once more ranging
close, toward the river and in the broken country bounded upon the west by
the fenced-in railroad, three calves bore the VP brand—three husky
heifers that never had suckled a VP mother. So had the range gossip, sown
by chance in the soil of his greed of gain and his weakening moral fiber,
borne fruit.</p>
<p>The deed scared him sober for a month. For a month his color changed and
his blood quickened whenever a horseman showed upon the rim of Cold Spring
Coulee. For a month he never left the ranch unless business compelled him
to do so, and his return was speedy, his eyes anxious until he knew that
all was well. After that his confidence returned. He grew more secretive,
more self-assured, more at ease with his guilt. He looked the Wishbone men
squarely in the eye, and it seldom occurred to him that he was a thief; or
if it did, the word was but a synonym for luck, with shrewdness behind.
Sometimes he regretted his timidity. Why three calves only? In a deep
little coulee next the river—a coulee which the round-up had missed—had
been more than three. He might have doubled the number and risked no more
than for the three. The longer he dwelt upon that the more inclined he was
to feel that he had cheated himself.</p>
<p>That fall there were no fires. It would be long before men grew careless
when the grass was ripened and the winds blew hot and dry from out the
west. The big prairie which lay high between the river and Hope was dotted
with feeding cattle. Wishbones and Double Diamonds, mostly, with here and
there a stray.</p>
<p>Manley grew wily, and began to plan far in advance. He rode here and
there, quietly keeping his own cattle well down toward the river. There
was shelter there, and feed, and the idea was a good one. Just before the
river broke up he saw to it that a few of his own cattle, and with them
some Wishbone cows and a steer or two, were ranging in a deep, bushy
coulee, isolated and easily passed by. He had driven them there, and he
left them there. That spring he worked again with the Wishbone.</p>
<p>When the round-up swept the home range, gathering and branding, it chanced
that his part of the circle took him and Sandy Moran down that way. It was
hot, and they had thirty or forty head of cattle before them when they
neared that particular place.</p>
<p>“No need going down into the breaks here,” he told Sandy easily. “I've
been hazing out everything I came across lately. They were mostly my own,
anyway. I believe I've got it pretty well cleaned up along here.”</p>
<p>Sandy was not the man to hunt hard riding. He went to the rim of the
coulee and looked down for a minute. He saw nothing moving, and took
Manley's word for it with no stirring of his easy-going conscience. He
said all right, and rode on.</p>
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