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Hearing the cook rattling his pots and pans would signal the wrangler to ride out and bring in the remuda. Then, when breakfast was ready, Cornett and the cowboys who would be riding point would rise so they could eat first, then ride out to be with the herd as the cows began rising from their bed ground.

Finally, the cook would start banging on a pot with a large spoon, making a terrible racket as he called out.

“People, people, people! Out of your sacks and into the heat! Off your ass and on your feet! Come and get it, or I’ll throw it out!”

“Hey, Bailey, you wouldn’t really throw it out, would you?” a young cowboy named Stewart asked.

“You damn right I’d throw it out!” Bailey replied. “I gotta get my wagon ready and move on to the next spot so I can set up for lunch. I don’t have time to be lollygaggin’ around.”

“You better go up there first, kid,” Stewart teased. “Because if you don’t beat Forney through the chow line, he’ll gobble it all up like a pig wallowing through slop.”

“What are you calling slop, boy?” Bailey said. “You don’t want breakfast, you just say so and I won’t even bother to cook it.”

“I wasn’t talking about your food, Bailey,” Stewart said. “I was just funnin’ with the kid is all.”

By the time breakfast was over, the trail boss and those who rode point had already reached the herd, and the cattle were beginning to leave the bed ground and start their own breakfast, grazing as they started moving north. Those on point positioned themselves well back from the lead steers so the cattle could spread out and graze along at their own pace.

Although Rebecca had been around cowboys for her entire life, she had always observed them from the lofty station of being the daughter of one of the biggest ranchers in Texas. She had thought them to be like children in a way, laughing much, finding fun where they could, but always respectful of her and her parents.

Now she was seeing cowboy life from the other side. The cowboy worked for forty dollars a month and food, and for this the cowboy was prepared to perform labor, no matter how hard it be, fight against Indians or cattle thieves, even to the point of risking his life, put in eighteen hours a day in the saddle, twenty-four in case of an emergency, all the while providing his own clothes, bedding, hat, boots, saddle, bridle, clothes, rope, spurs, pistol, and ammunition. The diet consisted of biscuits, bacon, beef or salt pork, beans, potatoes, dried fruit, and coffee.

Rebecca had not brought a pistol. She didn’t own one, and had not thought about it. She took a little ribbing for that.

“Hey, Carmody, what are you going to do if the Injuns decide to attack us? How are you going to fight off the cattle rustlers? What are you going to do, throw rocks at them?”

Rebecca took the teasing good-naturedly, and when the others saw the skill with which she could cut cattle, or run down an errant steer and push him back into the herd, they accepted the new young cowboy as one of them. They even accepted her staying by herself as much as possible, passing it off as being shy.

The storm hit midway through their second week on the trail. Far in the distance, Rebecca could see a line of dark clouds on the horizon. As she stared at the clouds, she saw flashes of light from within. She knew that those were flashes of lightning, but the thunder came so long after the lightning flashes, and was so low, that it was little more than a very distant rumble.

Then the breeze, such as it was, stopped, and it was as if the air itself couldn’t move. Sweat began to form on Rebecca’s face, actually mixing with the dust to turn into mud. Gradually the flashes became brighter, the thunder closer upon the flashes and louder. In addition, a heavy mist rose from the ground.

Then, as the cloud bank came toward them, it seemed to hang menacingly just overhead. Now it grew dark, almost as dark as nightfall. A sudden, blinding flash of lightning lit up the countryside, followed immediately by a roaring thunderclap. Before the thunder even faded away, the herd was running, and even above the sound of the storm, Rebecca could hear the rumble of hooves and the frightened bellow of the cattle.

Rebecca let go of her reins and squeezed down hard on the saddle horn, hoping that the horse she was riding could keep its feet and stay out of harm’s way. Finally the storm abated and the cows stopped running, but the cattle were strung out in one long string and it took until mid-afternoon to get the herd reassembled.

But even though the rain had stopped, their problems weren’t over. The rain had turned the prairie into a huge mud bog, making it hard for man and animal to eat. With the cattle, it was because the grass had been pretty much trampled down into the mud, and when the cattle could eat, they wound up consuming as much mud as grass. The cook had a hard time finding dry wood for a meal, and on the night after the big storm, nobody slept due to wet blankets and water on the ground.

It took two more days to dry out, but finally the cowboys were rested because they had been able to sleep dry, and the cattle were content because once more the grass was green and sweet, and the cows were eating well. Then, one week after the great storm, they ran into another problem.

At first, Rebecca didn’t believe what she was seeing, but she heard Stewart talking to one of the other cowboys so she knew that she wasn’t just imagining things. There, in front of them, far up in the panhandle just west of the Caprock Escarpment and south of the Canadian River breaks—

“What the hell?” Stewart said. “Sheep! Do any of the rest of you see what I’m seeing? Hell, they must be two or three thousand of ’em.”

“Where did they come from?” Fowler asked.

“Look at ’em! They’re eatin’ all the grass,” one of the other cowboys complained.

“No problem,” a third cowboy said. “All we got to do is start killin’ sheep. The rest of ’em will leave.”

“Yeah, either that or kill us a few sheep herders,” Stewart suggested.

Rebecca listened to the angry comments of Stewart and the other cowboys and cringed. She wanted no part of killing men or sheep. She breathed a sigh of relief when she heard John Cornett’s reply.

“Hold on, let’s don’t get ahead of ourselves here. Bring the sheep herders to me.”

“Be glad to. You want ’em draped over their horses? Or just bound and gagged?” Stewart asked.

“Neither,” Cornett replied. “Just bring them here and let me talk to them.”

The sheep were being worked by three dogs, so the three shepherds had nothing to do but to stand around and watch the dogs keep the sheep in line. Pierre Dubois was the first to see the rider approaching them, riding fast. He was also the first to see that the rider was holding a pistol in his hand.

“Gaston!” Pierre called to the one that the others recognized as the leader of their little group. “Quel-qu’un vient, et il a une arme à feu!”

“Yes, Pierre, I see that he has a gun.”

Stewart, the rider dispatched by Cornett to summon the shepherds, pulled his horse to an abrupt stop, and shouted angrily.

“Who is in charge? What are these sheep doing here?”

“Comme vous pouvez le voir, les moutons paissent,” Gaston said.

“What? What the hell did you say? What lingo is that?”

Neither Gaston, nor either of the other two, responded.

“All right, come with me,” Stewart said. And, making a motioning effort with his pistol, he made it known by sign language that he expected them to follow him, and follow him they did.

Rebecca waited with Cornett and the others, holding The Rockin H herd in place until the shepherds were brought into camp. There were three of them, tall thin men, all with beards and wearing black berets. It was not only their hats that differentiated them from the cowboys. They were wearing short jackets, crimson in color, and dark blue trousers. None were wearing boots.