Go West~Chapter 14

Chapter 14

Go West

by DiVoran Lites

Chapter  Fourteen

Aldon

Three days later, before sunrise, Aldon arranged himself on the seat of the chuck wagon with Ellie beside him. He was glad to have the use of Dieter’s mules, as he slapped the reins lightly along their backs. Mules were good value. They weren’t as pretty as horses, but they were stronger. They had better horse sense and enough self-respect not to allow folks to ride them to death.

“Git-up,” he shouted as the animals pulled the wagon forward through the pasture and upward into the range. Next to him, Ellie smiled, and at the same moment, a rim of sunshine came up over the top of the treeless peaks.

Aldon knew everyone was in formation. He and Ellie headed the group. Dieter, temporary trail boss, rode to their right with a point man on either side of the herd behind him. They had one swingman and one flank man, on opposite sides of the herd. Joe led three horses toward the left of the chuck wagon.

If we do this again next year, Aldon thought, I’ll let Kenny wrangle the horses. Once someone as bright and willing as Kenny has ridden drag all the way, with the dirt in his nostrils, stinging his eyes, and gritting between his teeth, he deserves a promotion.

As the group moved farther up the mountain, Aldon looked back at half a thousand bobbing heads. Cattle ranching had been good for his family, but if he had a choice, he’d rather be training horses in Hollywoodland, like his brother, Bill, than herding cows.

“Well, Miss Morgan, here you are in the Wild West. What do you think of it?”

“I’m going to have to get a hat. Where did you get yours, Mr. Leitzinger?”

“Colleen will order you one, or I can let you use Granny’s sun bonnet.” Aldon felt sorry that he hadn’t thought to give it to her before they started out.

“Is that the one I saw hanging on the porch?” Ellie asked with a sidewise grin. “I took the liberty of trying it on, and I probably should have worn it, but I guess you might say I was too vain. It’s not my style. I like your John B. Stetson better; you think I could get one of those?”

“You know the brand of my hat?” This gal was full of surprises.

“Morgan’s department store carries them. I believe Mr. Stetson was inspired by the ten-gallon cowboy hats when he visited Colorado.”

“You don’t say?” Aldon thought she must be the smartest woman he’d ever met, except maybe for his mother, Nancy. “We’ll get you a Stetson, one way or the other.”

“By the way, thanks for letting me wear your mother’s clothes. Are you sure she won’t mind?” Ellie asked.

Aldon and Molly had both known that Nancy would want Ellie to wear her long johns, jeans, and flannel shirt, anything she owned, but hadn’t taken with her to Artesia. The young woman from Chicago, of course, had not brought that kind of working duds, and she’d need them for a rough job at high altitude. He had given her the soft, leather sheepskin jacket he’d grown out of at sixteen. Looking at her in it, he remembered how warm the wool felt on the other side of his shirt when the temperature dropped.

At first, the trail was plenty wide enough, but it soon got so narrow that the herd no longer walked spread out, as it had through the pastures. Instead, the cattle fell naturally into single file as they followed the wagon onto the shelf road that Aldon’s ancestors had dynamited out of the side of the mountain. It was a quicker and easier way than trying to drive the wagon over boulders that hid beneath grass and wildflowers in the high meadows. Aldon knew the trail ran more than seventy feet above the creek in some places and was almost too narrow for the wagon, but the chance of the wagon sliding off had never worried him before now.

Knowing that most Easterners got antsy about such heights he glanced at Ellie to see how she was doing. She stopped staring at the creek far below long enough to lift questioning eyes to his.

“You see up there where the trees don’t grow?” In order to distract her, he directed her attention to timberline.

“Yes, I do. Did somebody cut them all down for firewood or what?” she asked searching the high horizon.

“No, they just won’t grow at that altitude.”

“That’s strange.” She continued to look up.

“ ‘I will lift up my eyes to the hills. My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth,’ ” he murmured thoughtfully.

“What?” She seemed startled. “I wouldn’t think you’d need much help. You can do anything.”

“Oh, I’ve got my problems,” he said. “But when I think about the Master, they fade away because I know He’s taking care of me. I’ve needed to know that since I got home from the war.”

She gave him such an eager look that he wondered if he should tell her more. He’d try it and if she lost interest, he’d quit.

“For one thing, I sometimes need help holding my temper. It might have something to do with the way my brothers and I always fought when we were coming up. We only had to look at each other cross-eyed and we were in a tangle.”

“Everybody has faults of one kind or another.” Ellie slipped her arm through his. “I think you’re a good man.”

“Thank you ma’am, but I wouldn’t mind being a bit more saintly.”

“Nobody is a saint,” she said.

“I beg to differ, kid,” he said, “followers of Christ are always called saints.”

“Why?”

“The Bible says we are.” Suddenly he decided that he’d said enough. He had her respect, why risk losing it by being too preachy.

 

By noontime, they had arrived at a high, wide meadow ringed with shimmering aspens. Bunch grass, Indian paintbrush, and daisies covered the ground. In the sky, fleecy gray-lined clouds gave only a bit of shade from the sun, but a cooling breeze rolled past on its way down the mountainside. Some cows lay down while others slowly foraged as their calves nursed.

 

Go West~Chapter 13

Chapter 13 Cow and Calf

Go West

Chapter Fourteen

Ellie

As Molly, Kate, and Ellie approached the log corral, Ellie saw the cattle kicking up dust in the far corner. Molly stepped onto the bottom log and put her arms over the top one to balance herself. Ellie, taking her lead, helped Kate up, and the three women waited for the action to begin. Ellie saw the handles of the branding irons sticking out of the fire in the middle of the enclosure.

“It won’t be long now,” Molly shouted. She waved to one of the older cowboys. “There’s Jim, he married my cousin.”

“Good morning.” Aldon rode over on one of the most beautiful horses Ellie had ever seen. Its white mane and tail blew free. The colors on its hide reminded her of a brown, black, and burnt orange painting, on a white background, she had seen in a gallery once.

“Is that Chief?” Ellie asked, remembering her few conversations with Aldon. The horse nodded its head twice as if in answer, but Ellie suspected it was only demonstrating impatience.

“Yeah, he’s an Appaloosa.” Aldon answered.

“I like his hair,” she hid a smile, knowing her choice of words would tease Aldon. He hesitated before speaking, but then he smiled too.

“Most of his breed has one or two colors, but he got all four.” Aldon touched the brim of his Stetson. “We’ll get to work, now, kid. So long.” He touched the brim of his Stetson, gave the animal a light kick with the heel of his boot and they were away.

Ellie, watched Aldon as he left. Suddenly he had a rope in his hands and was twirling it over the cows’ heads. He seemed to choose a cow and calf to separate by letting the loop drift between them. The cow stepped back, and at the perfect moment, the loop settled on the ground under the calf’s hoof, catching him by the ankle. Aldon pulled the rope tight, and Chief strolled pulling the calf along behind on three legs. At the fire, a big man grabbed it and threw it to the ground. He tied its back feet together, then its front ones.

The creature bellowed in pain as another man shoved a red-hot iron into its hip. The sizzle and smoke from the burning brand, and the odor of singed hair took Ellie back to early days at Grandmother’s store when she trained in the beauty salon. It was the day the permanent wave machine malfunctioned and burned the curls off a patron’s head at the scalf. The smell, combined with the calf’s agony, made her sick at her stomach, so she lowered her head hoping she wouldn’t upchuck into the corral. She didn’t think anyone saw her distress, but when she looked up, Molly was scowling at her.

Telling herself to be brave Ellie looked again into the center of the pen where the young steer had been released to return to its bawling mother. A cowboy, down on one knee tossed something white that looked like baby eggplants into a galvanized bucket.

“There now,” said Molly, “that’s the castration done. Those Rocky Mountain oysters are a treat for the men. They insist on frying them theirselves. They think a woman can’t do it, but I was frying them when they were only gleams in their dad’s eyes, so they needn’t tell me there’s anything a woman can’t do.” Molly stepped down and started back toward the house. “We have to get dinner ready, and then start on supper.” The other two joined her.

“Will those poor calves be ready to travel this week?” Ellie asked.

“Sure and they will. They never give it thought. What’s the matter, girl? You can’t be feeling sorry for everything and everybody around here. This is a working ranch! You’d best hurry up

***

“Are you ready for the drive?” Aldon stood in front of the serving table, which had been brought outside for the noon meal, giving her a knowing look. Apparently, her lapse of attention was already the talk of the ranch.

“Ready when you are,” she said, handing him a slice of bread. He laid it on top of his chili.

“Thanks for the grub.” Aldon turned and walked over to a grove of trees where the other men sat on the grass eating. She wished he could have stayed and talked, but she knew they must tend to their jobs. As Molly had said earlier, there was no time for lollygagging.

“We better slice the cakes.” Molly came up behind her and set a cake and a knife on the table. “Those fellers will have all that chili et in no time and be looking for more.”

She was right. They wolfed down their dinner, came for seconds, and then demolished the cakes. As the cooks cleared the tables, the men rested against cottonwoods with their hats pulled over their eyes to shield them from the bright sun. The younger ones, including Kenny Fitzgerald, roughhoused like warriors training for battle. Too bad we have no young maidens here to swoon over them, thought Ellie.

***

At suppertime, after the branding was finished, the men filed into the kitchen and seated themselves at the long table. Since she was going on the cattle drive, Aldon insisted that Ellie sit down with them instead of serving. Molly gave him an annoyed look before she handed him the plate of Rocky Mountain Oysters, the product of the need to neuter the calves. As the plate went around and the contents disappeared, the men laughed and joked. The plate was almost empty when it reached Ellie, but the men had stopped eating and talking and were staring at her. She forked a Rocky Mountain Oyster, put it on her plate, took a deep breath, and cut off a morsel. The men fell silent, all looking at her. She knew she had to prove she wasn’t a sissy so she put the bite into her mouth. As she chewed, she thought she might be sick again. It only took a moment, however, to discover that the meat tasted like nothing, but fried flour, salt, and pepper. She smiled, and the men around the table roared. Kenny applauded, and the rest joined in.

The Day of the Root Canal

 

Making Time
By DiVoran Lites

The Day of the Root Canal

DiVoran Lites

 

Today is the last day of April.
The showers have come down on time.
Love bugs are hugging the window.
And here I am looking for rhyme.
I need to stop in for panacea.
And visit the doctor there, too.
And then I’ll have lunch with my daughter.
It’s something that I love to do.

 

I hope I’ll get home for a rest.
I hope I won’t dream of my trials.
I hope that the dentist won’t hurt me.
With needles and grinders and files.

I know that you, Lord will go with me.
You’ll be there to comfort and ease.
I trust you with all of my troubles.
But let it be over soon, please.