Chapter Eleven

Though Sky Meadow Ranch had no cattle yet, they were raising their own pork and chickens, and Elmer was out feeding the chickens when he saw Duff approaching, still some distance away. He finished his chores, then went back into the house and made a pitcher of lemonade to have ready for Duff’s return.

Duff dismounted in front of the house, but did not unsaddle Sky. Elmer met him on the front porch with a glass of lemonade.

“Thanks,” Duff said, accepting the glass.

“Want me to unsaddle Sky for you?”

Duff took a swallow before he responded. “Thank you, no. I’m afraid I’m going to have to ride on into town.”

“Oh. Well, I’m sure Miss Parker will be glad to see you. I delivered your letter, by the way.”

“Thanks, but it isn’t to see Meghan that I’m going to town, though if she isn’t too busy, perhaps I will stop by the store. I have to send a telegram,” Duff said.

“I’ll ride into town with you, if you don’t mind.”

“I don’t mind at all. I’d appreciate the company.”



On the way into town, Duff filled Elmer in on everything that had happened since he’d left, including the shoot-out he’d had on the road on the way back home.

“I left them there,” he said, concluding his story. “So it’s needing for me to tell the police back in Cheyenne where the brigands might be found.”

“If there is any justice, the buzzards will have picked their eyes out by the time they find them,” Elmer said.

When they reached Chugwater, Duff rode directly to the telegraph office. There, using one of the pre-printed forms, he wrote his message.


TO: Chief Homer Davis, Cheyenne Police Department, Cheyenne, Wy.


On my return trip from Cheyenne to Chugwater I was attacked by three men. I don’t know their names, though one was the brother of Tyler Camden. I had no choice but to kill all three. You will find their bodies alongside the trail. Should you wish to speak with me, you can contact me at the address listed below.


Duff Tavish MacCallister, Sky Meadow Ranch, Chugwater, WT


Duff handed the message to the telegrapher, Dan Murchison.

“Well, Mr. MacCallister, let’s see what the charges are,” he said with a broad smile as he took the note. The smile left his face as he read the message.

“Oh, my, you had quite a frightening experience,” he said. “And you killed all three?”

“Aye,” Duff said. “It seemed the thing to do at the time.”

“Yes, sir, I suppose it did.”

“What are the charges?”

“That would be one dollar and twenty cents,” Murchison said.

After sending a telegram to the police back in Cheyenne, Duff walked over to the city marshal’s office. Jerry Ferrell, the marshal, had a chair drawn up to the bars of the jail cell, playing checkers with Perry Keith, who was serving a week in jail for drunk and disorderly conduct, to wit, “urinating in public.”

Ferrell jumped three of Keith’s men, then wound up on king’s row.

“Crown me,” he said.

“Oh, you’re killing me here,” Keith said as he placed a second checker on top.

“Damn, this is fun,” Ferrell said. “Tell you what, soon as I let you out, how about peeing in the street again so I can put you back in jail? You’re just too easy to beat.”

“I told you, I don’t remember peeing in the street,” Ferrell said. “I was drunk.”

“Yeah, well, that’s sort of the whole point of you being in here now, isn’t it?” Ferrell said. He turned to Duff. “Yes, sir, Duff, what can I do for you?”

“I just thought I would let you know that you might get a telegram from the police chief down in Cheyenne,” Duff said.

“About the fella you shot in the saloon there?” Ferrell said. “I already heard from him about that. He says there’s no charges.”

“No, not that. ’Tis another incident I’m talking about.”

Duff told the marshal about his encounter with the three men on the way back to Chugwater, emphasizing that he was attacked first, and that one of the attackers was the brother of the man he had killed earlier in the saloon.

“Actually, I only killed two of them,” Duff concluded. “One of them was killed by Camden, by a shot that was meant for me but missed. I left all three of them lying alongside the road, and I just sent a telegram to Chief Davis to tell him about it.”

“I appreciate your coming to me,” Ferrell said. “I’ll send a follow-up telegram to Chief Davis to see what’s going on.”

“’Tis my thanks you have, Constable,” Duff said. “I’ll be around if you have need for me.”

“All right,” Ferrell said. “But if it happened the way you said, and I’ve no reason to doubt you, I’m sure nothing will come of it.”

Thinking he wasn’t being watched, Keith put his hand through the bars and repositioned one of his checkers.

“I saw that!” Ferrell said. “Damn it, Keith, you’re cheating!”

“Of course I’m cheating,” Keith said without any sense of shame. “I’m in jail. That’s what people who are in jail are like.”

Duff laughed as he left the marshal’s office, then walked over to R.W. Guthrie’s Building, Supply, and Freight Company to make arrangements for picking up his hay mower.

“You’ll have the hay mower in two days,” R.W. Guthrie said. “I’ll even have my boys assemble the thing for you.”

“Thank you, R.W.,” Duff said.

“We heard of your adventure in Cheyenne,” Guthrie said. “Charley Blanton picked it up from the Cheyenne Leader and reprinted it in the Defender.”

“Did he, now?” Duff replied. Duff didn’t mention his encounter with the three men on his way back home.

“You headin’ down to Fiddler’s Green?” R.W. asked.

“Aye, I thought I might.”

“Well, hold on a minute. As soon as I get this order written up, I’ll walk down there with you.”

While R.W. was writing up the order, Duff stepped up to the big window in front of R.W.’s place and looked out over the town. A huge banner was spread across the street, tied to Kimberly’s Dry Goods on one side of the street, and Holman’s Drugs on the other side.


FIREMEN’S BENEFIT BALL SATURDAY NIGHT

He had not seen Meghan since coming back into town because he didn’t want to barge in while she had a client. But he intended to see her before he went back out to the ranch today.



Fifteen minutes later, Duff and R.W. joined Fred Matthews, the owner of the Chugwater Mercantile, Charley Blanton, owner and publisher of the Defender, and Elmer, who had gone straight to Fiddler’s Green as soon as he and Duff had reached town. The saloon owner, Biff Johnson, was sitting with them as well.

Biff Johnson was a former first sergeant in the army, and had been in the 7th Cavalry with Reno at the battle of the Little Big Horn. He had named his saloon Fiddler’s Green after the old cavalry legend that “any trooper who has ever heard the trumpeter play ‘Boots and Saddles’ will, when he has died, go to Fiddler’s Green, there to drink and visit with all the other cavalrymen until final judgment.”

Elmer had already shared with them the story of Duff’s encounter with the three men on the road, and Blanton was busy writing the story.

“Damn, Duff, you didn’t say anything to me about that,” Guthrie said.

“The subject didn’t come up,” Duff said.

The others laughed. “The subject didn’t come up,” Blanton repeated as he wrote it into his story. “That’s a good line.”

“Did you get the telegram sent?” Elmer asked.

“Yes, I told Chief Davis what happened, and where to find the bodies. Then I stopped down to the constable’s office and told Marshal Ferrell. I also told him I would be available if either he or Chief Davis need me.”

“They aren’t going to need you,” Murchison said, coming into the saloon then, carrying a telegram with him. “Chief Davis just sent this telegram to you and to Marshal Ferrell.”

Duff read the telegram.


THE BODIES OF DINGUS CAMDEN, LEE AND MARVIN MOSLEY HAVE ALREADY BEEN RECOVERED. THE INCIDENT WAS WITNESSED BY MR. EVAN WEBB. HIS STORY CORROBORATES THE ACCOUNT TOLD BY MR. MACCALLISTER. NO FURTHER INVESTIGATION IS NEEDED.


“Good,” Duff said. “’Tis glad I am to be done with that adventure.”

“You weren’t the only one with an adventure,” Biff said. “Elmer, here, had an adventure of his own.”

“Wasn’t much of an adventure,” Elmer said.

“The hell it wasn’t,” Biff said. “Folks in here are still talkin’ about it.”

“What happened?”

Biff told the others the story of how Elmer had backed down a young would-be gunman named Clete Wilson. He was very expressive as he told the story, and when he told how Wilson held his arms over his head, pleading with Elmer not to kill him all the while peeing in his pants, it left the others laughing.

“Have you seen him since then?” Duff asked.

“Ain’t seen hide nor hair of him,” Biff said. “If you want my thinkin’, it’s that he is plumb out of the territory now.”

The conversation returned to Duff’s intention to stock his ranch with Black Angus.

“I still don’t understand why you want to go to all the trouble to get Black Angus cows,” Fred said. “Longhorns have been just fine for as long as I can remember.”

“Well, Herefords are better than Longhorns,” R.W. said.

“If Sky Meadow is to prosper, it will have to stand out among all the other fine ranches in Chugwater Valley. And ’tis no better a way for me to do that than to be stocking my ranch with the best beef cattle in the world, and that would be Black Angus,” Duff said.

“There is not a thing wrong with Longhorns. They are hardy creatures and they can live on dew and scrub grass. You go bringing in some high-toned cow, ’tis goin’ to be nothin’ but trouble, I tell you,” Fred insisted.

“Fred, have you ever eaten an Angus steak?” Biff asked.

“And how would I have done that, I ask you, when I never even heard of the creatures until Duff came up with this wild idea of his?”

“Well, I have. Two years ago my wife and I took a trip back to Scotland to see her sister who still lives there. She served steak, and when I took my first bite I knew it was something different. Not tough like Longhorn, and never have I put a thing in my mouth that tasted better.” Biff looked at Duff. “I say go for it, Duff, and when you take your first beef to market, I’ll buy a couple myself and add some fine dining by serving my customers Angus steak.”

“Ha! Fine dining in a saloon?” Fred asked.

“I’ll build on to the side. I own the empty lot next door. I’ll have a saloon in here and a fine restaurant next door.”

“When will you actually get your cattle?” Fred asked.

“I don’t know. I guess as soon as they get enough put together to make up the herd I want.”

“Will they be shipping them to you? Or will you have to go after them?” Fred asked.

“Mr. Conn is the Kansas City Cattle Exchange representative in Cheyenne, and I asked him to arrange for them to be shipped by train to Cheyenne. I’ll drive them down from there.”

“Five hundred cows, you say?” R.W. asked.

“Aye.”

“That’s a lot of cattle for one man to be driving.”

“I’ll not be alone.”

“Is Elmer goin’ with you?”

“Damn right I’m goin’,” Elmer said. “I’ve worked side by side with Duff for a year to get this ranch ready. Now that we are finally about to get some cows, I intend to be there from the beginning.”

“Still, five hundred cows, even with two men, will be difficult.”

“I’ll hire some men before then,” Duff said. “Once I get the herd onto my ranch, I shall be needing a few more employees, anyway.”

“If you have any trouble coming up with hands, let me know,” Biff said. “I can probably find a few for you.”

“Thank you, I appreciate that,” Duff replied.

“I reckon you’ll be goin’ to the big shindig we got comin’ up Saturday night, won’t you?” Fred asked.

“Aye. I would not wish to miss it.”

“Ha! You’d better watch it, Duff,” Blanton said. “Fred is about to try and sell you a ticket. He is the head of the Fireman’s Ball committee you see, so he’s after every dollar he can get.”

“It will cost you a dollar,” Fred said. “And if you pay now, you won’t have to pay at the door. We are going to charge a dollar and a quarter at the door.”

“See what I mean?” Blanton said.

Chuckling, Duff pulled out his billfold and gave Fred a dollar. “Tell me,” he said. “Has Miss Parker bought a ticket yet?”

“No.”

Duff handed Fred another dollar. “Then I should like to buy one for her,” he said.

“Well, now, I’m sure she will appreciate that,” Fred said.

“Will you be taking your pipes to the ball?” Biff asked. He was asking about the bagpipes that Duff often played.

“I could be talked into it,” Duff answered.

“And believe me, it doesn’t take much to talk him into it, either,” Elmer said. “He has those things caterwauling all the time.”

Och, Elmer, and would ye be for disparaging m’ pipes now?” Duff asked.

“Oh, no, no, I’d never do a thing like that,” Elmer said. “I know what them screechin’ things mean to you.”

Biff chuckled. “I will always remember the day you came into town to take care of Malcolm and his gang. You stood down at the end of the road and started playin’ your pipes. It was a glorious sight to see him so afraid.”

“’Tis the pipes!” Malcolm said, standing up so quickly that the chair in which he was sitting fell over with a bang.

“The what?” Pettigrew asked.

“The pipes! MacCallister is playing the pipes! Everyone get into position, he’s coming!”

The others moved quickly to get into the positions they had already selected. Malcolm, with pistol in hand, moved to the batwing doors and looked out into the street as Pogue and Shaw went about clearing it.

“Get off the street! Get out of the way!” Pogue and Shaw were shouting. “Get out of the street or get shot!”

The pipes continued to play “Scotland the Brave,” which only Malcolm recognized as the incitement to battle. The fact that pipes were being used against him gave him a chill, and though he wouldn’t mention it to any of the others, it had frightened him.

“With your skill with a pistol, it won’t be long before you’ll have a reputation to match that of your cousin, Falcon MacCallister,” Charley Blanton said. “I wasn’t the only one to pick up the story of what happened down in Cheyenne when you shot Tyler Camden while he was holding a knife to that lady’s neck. It has been run in papers all over the West. ‘The shot,’ they are calling it.”

“There wasn’t much to it,” Duff said. “It wasn’t as if I had to make a rapid extraction of my pistol.”

Elmer laughed. “Quick draw, Duff. How many times do I have to tell you that it is not a rapid extraction, it is a quick draw.”

The others laughed.

“Quick draw, aye, but whatever it be called, ’tis a skill with which I am not particularly proficient,” Duff replied. “But as I said, in this case, swiftness was not required, just a bit of accuracy.”

“A bit of accuracy?” Blanton said with a scoffing sound. “According to what they are saying, you took your shot from one hundred feet away, and hit a target no larger than a playing card.”

“Why, pshaw, that ain’t nothin’ at all,” Elmer said. “I oncet seen him shoot a gnat offen the hind leg of a fly from fifty feet away, and here’s the thing, he didn’t even hurt the fly.”

Again, everyone laughed.

“Elmer, I spent thirty years in the army, and the army is full of people who can tell tall tales, but I ain’t never heard no one that can top you.”

“Those eight men came after you here in Chugwater last year, then you had an encounter with Camden in Cheyenne, and three more men on the road as you were coming back home. It’s no wonder you left Scotland,” Biff said. “Trouble just seems to have a way of followin’ you.”

Duff was silent for a moment. “I fear you may be right,” he replied, the tone of voice more somber than anyone expected.

“I’m sorry about mentionin’ Scotland,” Biff said. “I didn’t mean to bring up old and painful memories.” Biff was one of the few who knew about Skye, and how she was killed.

“You didn’t bring the memories up, Biff. They never go away. And indeed, I just visited Scotland as you know,” Duff said. He finished his beer and stood up. “Well, gentlemen, I have had a pleasant visit here with my friends, but I’ve some more business to take care of before I leave, so best I get about it.”

“Do say hello to Miss Parker for us, will you, Duff?” Fred spoke up.

Duff had not said that he was going to call on Meghan Parker, but the way he smiled when Fred spoke proved that he had every intention of doing so.

“I will,” he said.

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