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CHAPTER XIV ENOUGH IS SUFFICIENT
The following morning Johnny rode toward the northwest corner of the Bar H, the hilly, wooded section which had been presided over by Wolf Forbes. On his ride from the Bar H bunkhouse to the Triangle he had seen numerous unbranded cattle and wondered what he would find on the difficult section over which Wolf was wont to hold jealous guard. Riding to the west of the town he then turned and went south, passing behind the Doc\'s cabin, and parallel with the over-mountain trail. Reaching Clear River he followed it onto Double X range and then let Pepper pick her way over the mountain, and soon came to his objective, where he found large numbers of cattle, with an unusually high percentage of mavericks among them.

"Pepper," he said, alert for signs of Bar H riders, "th\' SV has lost a lot of cows—an\' folks can\'t make cows. So if it\'s goin\' to make up its losses, it will have to do it with cows that are livin\' this very minute. Now, it ain\'t reasonable to go on a ranch an\' round up a lot of unbranded cattle, \'specially if it ain\'t willin\' for \'em to be rounded up. On th\' other hand, there ain\'t no harm in ridin\' around an\' sizin\' things up. We want to find out where th\' mavericks are, an\' get some idea of how many there are of \'em.

"Mebby you don\'t know it, but a lot of mavericks[174] means, generally, a lazy outfit, not to say nothin\' worse. An\' when a ranch reckons it\'s fenced off by natural barriers from other herds, that don\'t excuse \'em. A dishonest foreman or outfit, or a couple of dishonest men in it, can get rich with mavericks, if they know their business, an\' don\'t work too hard. An\' if th\' whole outfit is dishonest an\' workin\' for its ranch, mavericks belongin\' to surroundin\' ranches are awful temptations.

"Now, th\' SV don\'t earnotch its calves. They don\'t have no sleepers, at all; an\' I know that calves will wander from their mothers after they are weaned, an\' get notions of their own; an\' they can be cut out an\' drove to another range an\' grow up to be big cows. On a ranch like th\' SV, that ain\'t had no round-up in three years, all calves will be mavericks. There won\'t be a sign on none of \'em to tell where they belongs.

"Now, then: We\'ll say th\' Bar H is dishonest, but its foreman an\' outfit is workin\' for th\' ranch an\' not for their own pockets. If they drove SV calves to their own ranch, they\'d put an iron on \'em as soon as they could, after which they wouldn\'t have to bother with \'em no more. They wouldn\'t have to be guarded jealous by th\' best man of th\' outfit, an\' turned back when they tried to get off th\' ranch. When I heard how Wolf almost lived out here, I got suspicious, Pepper; an\' when I saw too many mavericks on this ranch, I got more suspicious; an\' you\'ve mebby heard that I was brought up in a plumb suspicious outfit. Of course, all ranches are goin\' to have some mavericks, \'specially if it has a wild, rough range. Brush, timber, scrub, an\' broken country hides cows that don\'t get combed out[175] in a round-up; we had some, ourselves, down on th\' old Bar-20, along our west line—but th\' numbers out here are scandalous. I\'m keepin\' cases on these cattle, an\' I says it\'s so scandalous that it just can\'t be true—but it is true, so far. There\'s folks down here that are careless an\' lazy, or crooked an\' I\'ve got my suspicions about which it is.

"Now, we\'ll say that th\' outfit is crooked, an\' workin\' for its own pockets. They wouldn\'t want to brand any mavericks, not with th\' ranch mark. There\'s two ways of dividin\' that conclusion. First: That they\'re doin\' it for their own pockets, th\' foreman not knowin\' about it. But no foreman is so dumb that he\'d overlook so many mavericks—he\'d raise h—l, an\' weed out his punchers an\' get new men. There wouldn\'t be many cows unbranded if he was workin\' for his ranch. Th\' second is: Foreman an\' outfit are workin\' for themselves, dividin\' up th\' profits accordin\' to some plan. Then nobody would care how many mavericks there was, for th\' more th\' merrier. They\'d have a right smart herd to brand with th\' mark of some friend\'s ranch, road brand, an\' throw on th\' trail for some shippin\' point up north, near th\' railroad. Or mebby they figger on stockin\' a ranch of their own that they has in some other part of th\' country. Rustlers plumb love mavericks—an\' if I was one, an\' wanted to get rich, I know where I\'d start out. An\' if it wasn\'t for th\' Double X layin\' between this ranch an\' th\' Snake Buttes country, them rustlers over there would give this outfit sleepless nights. Them Double X punchers bein\' on th\' job all th\' time is all that saves these here mave[176]ricks from swappin\' ranges. Th\' Double X is workin\' for this passel of thieves, an\' don\'t know it.

"Now, then: These mavericks out here are mostly all three years old, or younger. There\'s some four-year-olds, an\' others, of course. An\' th\' SV ain\'t had a calf round-up in three years. Ain\'t that remarkable? Th\' Bar H owners get good reports every round-up. Th\' new calves keep right up to th\' factor of natural increase, an\' there ain\'t nothin\' to make anybody jump out here for a good look at things. An\' when th\' drive figgers go on, an\' show five hundred cattle on th\' beef trail, an\' really there is a thousand, th\' books balance just right; an\' Big Tom gets a Christmas present from th\' owners for bein\' such a good, honest foreman. Where that extra five hundred head goes to nobody knows but th\' outfit. I\'ve heard that Wolf is th\' segundo down here, an\' is trail boss on every drive. Do you wonder he\'s jealous of his mavericks out here, an\' watchin\' day an night for some of them Snake Buttes rustlers to bust through th\' Double X riders an\' pay this section a visit? Him bein\' so alert was another reason why I packed him off to Highbank for a day or two, where he can have excitement, an\' there\'s things to do an\' see. An\' while he\'s enjoyin\' th\' hilarity of town, we\'ll have a good look around. Pull up, Pepper, there\'s hoss tracks—fresh, too. They was made while th\' mornin\'s dew was heavy, which is told by th\' little chunks of dirt his hoofs picked up an\' turned over. You stay right here while I go ahead. Lay down!" He slapped the horse and gave a low, peculiar whistle. Pepper laid her ears back, but slowly obeyed the signal[177] and went down, "playing dead" on her side. Taking his rifle, Johnny slipped into the brush, following a course parallel to but some distance from the tracks. For an hour he trailed, seeing numbers of mavericks and but few branded cattle, and twice he was in danger of being charged by crusty, old long-horned "outlaws" who, while having a due and well-founded respect for mounted men, evidently regarded a man on foot as being a different and less dangerous species of animal. These he eluded by taking to the brush and swiftly getting out of sight, detouring and picking up the trail again farther along. Suddenly he stopped and laughed silently. On the farther side of a clump of brush a conical, vertically dented Mexican sombrero loomed against the sky. Waiting a moment to be sure that he had not been heard, he raised the rifle and took long, deliberate aim. With the roar of the gun the peak o............
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