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Subject: {ASSM} Audrey: Cattleman's Woe
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<1st attachment, "Audry04.txt" begin>

						Audry
					Cattleman's Woe
				A Tale of Romance by The Star*



I spotted the vultures circling the draw.  Curious, I turned my horse in 
that direction.  Probably a deer had been caught by coyotes.

What I saw turned my stomach.

A mare and a colt were lying at the edge of a small clearing, their bodies 
distended with the gasses of decomposition.  We'd just turned them out into 
the south range a few days before.   Both had been healthy and frisky--and 
the colt showed unusual early promise.  Now they were both dead.

The big birds lumbered off at my approach--but not too far.  I wouldn't be 
taking their dinner anywhere.  And I wouldn't be staying.

Both animals had been shot.  Close to $200,000 worth of horseflesh, wasted 
by a deer hunter, trespassing on posted land.

The ground didn't show much by way of tracks.  The grass was long and green. 
  Any sign of someone passing through it would have been eradicated within a 
day.  I looked for a place where a hunter might have waited--and finally 
found it, and the casings from a couple of rifle bullets.  That was odd...  
I couldn't identify the rounds, right off.

A little more work, and I found a spot where a large, 4-wheel drive vehicle 
had parked.  It had to have 4-wheel traction to get where it had been.  And 
there was an oil stain, from a leaky seal, on the grass and dirt.  The tires 
had been large, 'all terrain' types.

I was supposed to be checking on the horses in the south range.  Well, I'd 
better see if this varmint was still around, or there wouldn't be any horses 
left on the south range.  Following the trail of broken sagebrush and 
occasional tracks on bare soil, I soon followed him to the county road that 
goes through the southern part of the ranch.  He'd cut the fence to get out, 
but had patched it back.

A thought occurred to me, and I re-patched it, with a special little twist 
that I'd recognize.  If someone came through there again, I'd be able to 
tell.  An hour later, I found where he'd done the same, coming onto the 
ranch, and again put in my 'tell-tale'.

Then I rode home.


Home is the ranch headquarters for our spread, the Steele Ranch, about 
twenty miles south of Sisters, Oregon.  Surrounded by the Willamette 
National Forest, we have grazing rights on roughly 60,000 acres of forest 
land, in addition to the 58,000 acres we own outright.  My great-granddad 
had 'filed' on the ranch before the national forest system existed, which 
was how we managed to be a private hole in the Forest Service donut.

When I was a kid, growing up on the ranch, we were thirty miles of bad 
gravel road from Sisters, but the county and state had teamed up to put in a 
new chip-seal road that made it lots easier to get to town.  We had hopes 
that someday we'd also have a better route to Bend, which was really closer, 
as the crow flies.  That way we could get to a 'real city' for shopping or 
an occasional night on the town.

Our ranch had three houses, as well as a bunkhouse for the single cowboys, 
and a big trailer that Gerry, our only married hand, lived in.  The 'big 
house' was grandma's place, though Audry and I were taking it over, with 
grandma's enthusiastic connivance.  Our son, Zack, was the apple of 
grandma's eye and she wanted him right there where he could be spoiled 
properly.

Mom and dad had a home of their own, a couple of hundred yards to the 
southwest.  And Uncle Rick and Aunt Elin, Audry's folks, lived in a house a 
few hundred yards north.

Grandma said Audry and I needed our own place, and she had plenty of 
room--and wouldn't be around forever either.  (I don't believe that.  That 
remarkable woman will outlive us all, and be a randy old slut 'till the day 
she drops.)
Steele ranch is not the usual operation for eastern Oregon.  That is, we 
don't raise Herefords and pigs, growing alfalfa hay if we have enough water, 
and wheat with whatever allotment we can get.

Rather, we grow hay for our own use, and raise Black Angus breeding stock 
and show horses as our sources of income.

Our horses are world famous--among those who really know the competition 
equestrian scene.  We breed and train horses for the arena events, dressage 
and jumping, as well as the grueling three-day event.  One of our horses can 
easily bring $100,000--the best ones three or more times that.  If the horse 
is not up to mom's standards, it is sold into the riding stable market, 
after being gelded if a colt.  The mares aren't 'fixed', they just aren't 
registered or given 'papers'.

Mom was a world-class equestrienne.  Audry and I still are--both of us 
having won gold medals in the Olympics.  Audry and I know horses, and 
riding.  Mom has a special gift: She knows when a horse and rider are right 
for each other.  She's a hell of a trainer of both horse and rider, too.  
Her gift, really, is the secret to the success Audry and I have enjoyed.


					~~  * * * *  ~~


Audry came out on the porch, when she heard me ride up, little Zack in her 
arms.  It was meal-time, and he was greedily sucking away at one of Audry's 
lovely breasts.

"Didn't expect you until late tonight, Rob," she said.

After I'd kissed her as thoroughly as I could with the baby between us, I 
replied, "I ran into something.  Cinder and her colt were shot."

"Oh, no!  They were doing so well, too."

"Looks like a deer hunter or poacher.  Guy in a big 4x4 cut the fence and 
came in, staked out a spot, and banged away at whatever came along.  Cut the 
fence in a different place to get out."

Audry understood immediately.  Since so many 'city people' were buying the 
4x4 'sport utility vehicles', they had to prove their _machismo_ by running 
them off road over any land that took their fancy... private, posted, 
fenced... none of that seemed to matter any more.  And the law took a dim 
view of ranchers shooting trespassers.

That night, we told our parents and grandma what I'd seen.  We'd all be 
going armed around the ranch again.  Rifles on the western saddles, and in 
holders just inside barn doors.  Our pickup trucks held gun racks and they'd 
have rifles in them, too.

The ranch was 'posted' as plainly as humanly possible.  Our boundary fences 
had signs every hundred yards, "Private Property.  No Hunting.  No 
Trespassing." We made every effort to get all our stock off the leased 
grazing land before deer season started, too.

Even so, we'd get the hunters who were too illiterate to read the signs, or 
too arrogant to believe them.  When we caught them on the ranch, we'd make a 
citizen's arrest, confiscate their weapons and billfolds, and summarily 
remove them from our property.  If they complained, we'd offer to hold them 
for the sheriff to take them to jail.  (A couple did.  We tied them up in 
the barn, and called the sheriff--who sent out a deputy late the next 
morning to collect them.  They were then carried off to jail, booked, and 
released on bail a day later.  Of course, they then had to find a way back 
to pick up their vehicles, which we left on the county road--locked, with 
the keys inside.)

The billfolds were turned over to the sheriff, along with signed trespass 
complaints.  If they asked for the rifles back, we'd give them to the 
sheriff, who gave them to a friendly ATF (Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms) 
agent.  Otherwise, the rifles stayed on the place--that's how we got the 
weapons for inside the barn doors.

It's not that we weren't friendly, or good neighbors.  Anyone who had the 
courtesy to come and ask was allowed to hunt on our ranch, if he looked like 
he knew the difference between a deer, and a horse or cow--usually after 
being offered a drink, and some advice about where we'd seen the most deer 
recently.  Several of my fraternity brothers were annual visitors.  We've 
even had two or three hunting parties at once camping at the spring in the 
little draw--about a quarter mile from the house--during deer season.  They 
could have hunted public land, but they enjoy our place.  And respect our 
ranch and our stock.

(One of our 'regulars', coming back almost every other year, is a friend of 
mom's family, from Virginia.  He'd come here to look at a jumper he wanted 
to buy for his daughter.  The dinner conversation had turned to the deer 
season.  When he expressed an interest, I took him out, and helped him 
'luck' into a huge Mule Deer buck, with eight prongs on each antler.  He was 
hooked and came back whenever he could.)

That night, Audry welcomed me back home.  Even though I'd only been gone a 
day, we thought it was fun to have a welcome home celebration whenever 
either or both of us had been gone.  Truthfully, it was just an excuse to 
fuck like minks.

That night, I had a special treat, because I got to suck Zack's 'leftovers' 
from Audry's delightful breasts.

Her shape had nearly returned to its previous spectacular form.  Her tummy 
would need another couple weeks of sit-ups, but she'd be there right away.  
Her hips were slim as ever.  Only her breasts, still feeding our son, were 
larger than normal.  They were lots of fun in bed, but I knew they hurt her, 
bouncing when she went over the jumps.

When I'd finished my snack, we were both breathing heavily and, with 
whimpers and little moans, as well as pushes and tugs, Audry pulled me over 
her and sucked me in.  Though she'd given birth to our son not long before, 
she was hot, wet and tight around me.  And her muscle tone allowed her to 
squeeze me and caress me until I was frantic.

Of course, I'd been petting and kissing everything in reach myself, latching 
onto one of those amazing breasts--jutting into the air even when she was on 
her back--and sucking for all I was worth.

Audry bucked and convulsed and seemed to try to throw me off her body, while 
her legs were wrapped around me, and her heels on my butt were pulling me in 
as far as I could go.  I couldn't take much of it and fired that shot right 
into her, splashing against her cervix, while she shuddered and came with 
me.

My mate, my woman... my wife.  Audry.  For me, there had never been another, 
and never would be.  Besides being beautiful and a fantastic lay, she's 
bright and caring, a great mother, and loving wife.

And usually able to beat me in the arena events!


					~~  * * * * *  ~~


Losing the mare and her colt was a blow, but the family was philosophical 
about it.

Until we started losing cows, too.

Then we knew we had a problem.


They all followed the same pattern.  Someone cut the fence and drove onto 
the ranch, shot up a couple of animals, and left.

Uncle Rick talked with the sheriff.

He obviously didn't have the manpower to patrol our ranch.  But he would put 
out some feelers about strangers who kept coming back.  With the resort 
areas at Sisters and Bend and the ski resorts at Mt. Batchelor, it was hard. 
  We were looking for someone who might stay in one of those, but wandered 
around away from the resort in a large 4x4--probably a 3/4 ton to 1 ton 
pickup.

Meanwhile, I wandered up to the Warm Springs Indian Reservation.  A good 
friend from school, Gary Butler, was on the tribal council and might be able 
to help.
"Hey, Rob!" he greeted me, when I walked into his office at the KaNeeTa 
resort the Indians have built.  "Where's Audry?"

"Left her home this trip, Gary," while I pounded his back.  We've been 
friends a lot of years and don't get to see each other nearly enough.  "We 
have a son now, you know..."

"Yeah.  That's what I heard.  Congratulations!  With any luck, the little 
guy will look like his momma."

"Thanks, toad face.  Anyway, I just wanted to touch base on something."

"Next time bring her.  Better yet, you stay home and just send her along.  
She's not only lots nicer, she's a hell of a lot better looking."

"No argument there--except I wouldn't let her alone around you.  Without me 
there to protect her..."

We shared a laugh of friendship.

"Rob, you've got to spend the night.  Mary will kill me if she doesn't get 
to cook you a dinner, at least."

"I dunno, Gary.  I kind of said I'd see you and get right home...  We have a 
bit of trouble going on."

Instantly serious, Gary asked, "What kind of trouble?"

"Well, we've got a poacher.  But he only kills, he's not looking for meat.  
He's not a rustler, in the normal sense.  Just every week, or two, or three, 
he comes in and shoots some of our animals."

"Deer hunter?"

"That's what we thought at first.  But he doesn't shoot at deer.  Only our 
stock."

Gary was well aware that our stock wasn't just range beef.

"That's bad," he agreed.  "How can I help?"

"We think our guy is a city type.  Maybe moved out here, but city bred.  He 
drives a big 4x4.  I think it's a one-ton pickup, but could be wrong.  He 
seems to come around every couple of weeks--but any day of the week, not 
just weekends.  And he has a funny rifle."  I showed him the brass from one 
of the shootings--they'd all been the same.

Gary laughed at that.  "Nothing funny about those: Probably the most common 
bullet in the world.  This came from an AK-47.  There are millions of them.  
The Russians made them first, then the Chinese, then the Czechs...  Anyway, 
the weapon and the bullet are real common."

"Oh... Well, what I wanted is that you ask the folks here at KaNeeTa to keep 
their eyes open for a repeat customer who drives a big 4x4--and has a rifle. 
  I'd sure like to find out who this cat is and why he's picking on us...  
Of course, if I could get him to stop, that would be nice, too."

"Yeah.  I see that.  OK Rob.  Come on home.  Mary will give you dinner and a 
bed and call Audry to explain why you're delayed.  We can kick it around...  
I'll even feed you some fancy wine while we do."  He stopped grinning, then 
smiled serenely.  "You know I've been on the wagon for the past three 
years?"

"Mary told Audry.  That's great, Gary.  I'm happy for you.  In fact, I'll 
just drink coffee, if it will be easier?"

"Nah!  I'm around alcohol all the time.  I'm in charge of the resort 
operation for the tribe now.  We pump out a lot of booze, believe me.  So 
giving you a drink won't bother me."

"Super.  Let's get over to your place, so Mary can call.  Audry has the 
sweetest spirit of any woman I've met.  But grandma can be a terror, if you 
aren't where you're supposed to be."

Laughing, Gary took me home, where Mary pampered me something awful.

"Mary, you're too much!  When are you going to leave this ne'er-do-well and 
come live with me?"

"Just as soon as you get rid of Audry, Rob!"

"OK.  Peace."

We were really good friends.  As soon as Mary called Audry to tell her she 
wouldn't turn loose of me until the morning, Audry demanded to know when she 
was going to bring the kids to the ranch for a visit.  After some more 
girl-talk, Mary went into her kitchen and started banging things around.

It was a chance for Gary and me to chat.

"You know, Rob, I have an idea."

"Last one was when you first saw Mary, right?"

Laughing, he said, "How can I concentrate on your problem, when you do that 
to me?"

"OK, Gary.  It'll be hard, but I'll try to be good."

"ANYway...  You know, we have our own Boy Scout program here?"

"No, I hadn't heard about it.  No reason to, I suppose."

"We're under the national program, but we're allowed to include our own 
cultural stuff, too.  It works great.  Teaches citizenship and a look at a 
whole lot of practical skills--as well as more useful techniques for living 
in the woods than most of our kids are taught by their dads."

I nodded.

"The point is, we keep the senior scouts a year longer than normal.  We have 
a half-dozen 18- and 19-year-old boys still in our explorer post.  It's a 
place to hang out and something to do. We use them a lot for search and 
rescue in the mountains and the more rugged parts of eastern Oregon.  
Occasionally they'll also work on the fire lines, if there is a big forest 
fire...

"My thought was, maybe I'd lend you these kids for a couple of months.  They 
can kind of patrol your ranch and see what they can find.  You'd have to 
feed them--it wouldn't be cheap--and get them to town from time to time, to 
see their girl friends.  But it might just be a way to help."

I was enthusiastic.  "If they'll help move the cows and horses around from 
time to time, we'll even pay them a little."  I got a thought of my own.  
"If their girls can work on horseback, they could be part of it...?"

Gary looked disgusted.  "You have a really dirty mind, Rob.  Our young 
ladies are good girls.  They wouldn't want to do anything like that!"

Which prompted a yell from the kitchen: "What time warp have you been living 
in, Gary?  Rob, only one of those guys is going with a girl from off the 
reservation and she's from a nearby ranch.  All those kids would jump at the 
chance.  Of course, you'll have to have separate camps for boys and girls... 
  to start with..."

I laughed hard.  What a solution!

"I had in mind having the kids in pairs.  We can start them with boys 
together and girls together.  That won't last long, I think.  We'll have to 
make sure they pay attention to what's going on around them, though."

Mary winked at Gary.  "Rob, leave that to me.  I'll take care of it."

I gave Mary a big hug, and shook Gary's hand.  "OK, old friends.  Let's set 
it up."

The next day I returned to the ranch, and brought the family up to date.  
Dad and Uncle Rick were enthusiastic about the idea.  We'd feed the kids 
well, both in provisions for out in the weeds and good food when they were 
back at the ranch headquarters.

We brought in a trailer with two nice bedrooms, as a place for them to sleep 
on a real bed once in a while.  Of course, they could go into town every 
week or two, if they would prefer that.


The horses we bred were larger, but a bit more 'refined' than the normal cow 
pony.  We'd found, though, that the 'culls' from our breeding program made 
very good stock horses.  So we'd offer to 'pay' the kids with a horse of 
their own, from our 'range stock'.

The Warm Springs Indians really do have a strong ethical sense and raise 
their kids to high moral standards.  However, teenage hormones are teenage 
hormones, regardless of race.  So Indians seem to marry young...  Or maybe 
I'm just getting older.

Mary came to visit us a couple days later.  She and grandma and Audry talked 
at length about what we were trying to do and the 'ins and outs' of how we'd 
do things.  Then they worked out all the details with Uncle Rick.

All of these kids, including the girls, could shoot.  They'd all grown up 
hunting deer, and shooting varmints.  And they were all well trained to be 
careful with firearms, including the idea of not taking a shot if they 
weren't sure of the background--that is, where the bullet would impact 
eventually.
Less than a week after I'd gone up to see Gary, ten kids assembled at the 
ranch headquarters.  There were six boys, and four girls.  They were all 
excited about the idea of working for us and really excited when we told 
them they could each earn one of our ranch horses for their own.

Each kid had his own tack and camping gear.  And several had brought their 
own horses.  (That was great.  We would use the additional mounts as pack 
animals.)
We were a bit crowded that evening, when we fed everyone around grandma's 
table in the big house and then put them all up in whatever beds we could 
find.  (Two of the girls slept in Audry's old bed in Aunt Elin's house and 
one of the boys slept in my old bed.  The rest were in the trailer, the big 
house, and the bunkhouse.)

We explained in detail what we were facing and what we wanted them to do.  
We wanted to know who was doing this and just what he was doing.

If he could be caught without any danger to the kids, that would be optimum. 
  However, we stressed that we did not want any of them to put themselves in 
any danger whatsoever.

Then we went over a big map of the ranch and divided it up into sectors for 
each team.

Right from the beginning, two of the girls insisted that they be teamed with 
their boyfriends.  The other two girls were a team, but their boys were the 
team in the sector beside theirs.

The remaining two boys shrugged and teamed up.  They hoped their girls would 
join them later.

In the morning, we all went out to the corral, where Uncle Rick had 
assembled the 'ranch' horses.  Rick had not included horses that he didn't 
feel could stand up to the mountains, and the hard work they were likely to 
get.  The kids were awed.

One of the girls, Kathy, turned to mom and said, "You're really going to 
give me one of these?"  Mom nodded.  "Wow!  My brothers will turn green!"

The kids walked into the corral and chose a horse each.  Kathy led a couple 
around, and looked closely at several before she chose one.  I agreed with 
her choice, a big mare, with a strong build and gentle though roguish 
disposition.  That horse would carry her rider all day, through any kind of 
country.

Everybody saddled up, loaded up the pack horses, and headed out.  Since we 
knew the ranch best, each team had one of us along to show them their 
territory.   Our hand Gerry, Uncle Rick, Dad, mom and I, each led a team of 
kids.  We'd stay out for two days and show them their boundaries, and the 
landmarks to keep track of.  Our other two hands were mostly in the leased 
grazing anyway.  They'd just spend extra time there, to keep the best eye 
they could on that part of our herd.

Each of us, including the kids, had a rifle in a saddle scabbard--except 
mom, who rode English no matter what.  Her rifle was an M-16 carbine that 
hung muzzle down from a sling on her back.  Uncomfortable, but that's the 
way she insisted on doing it.

We started by making the kids familiar with the perimeter fence in their 
sectors.  Then we rode the borders of their allotted areas with them.  For 
most of us, the process took two full days.  I took three.  We also showed 
them where horses liked to go and where the cows tended to congregate.  And 
we pointed out ambush and shooting points that covered those spots.

So far, our enemy had used a vehicle.  Thus, we spent a lot of time talking 
about possible vehicle routes in and out of the sectors.

We pointed out good places to camp, while emphasizing the importance of 
keeping fires hidden.  No one knew if this guy was around at night or not.

We all enjoyed the beauty of that part of Oregon.

Each team had a battery-powered radio.  But the country was too rugged for 
them to be of more than limited use.  In extreme emergency, they could get 
to the highest place they could find and call the ranch.  If we were lucky, 
someone would hear.


~~  * * * *  ~~


The next ten days were an idyllic vacation for the kids.  The weather was 
good and they enjoyed the new scenery--and the proximity of their girl 
friends.  Understanding our problem, the teams all waited until after the 
weekend to go to town.  (The two guys whose girls were teamed with them 
magnanimously waited until all the others had enjoyed a break.) One of the 
boys, whose girl hadn't come along originally, brought her with him when he 
came back.  That was OK, we just sent the girl to ride with the other two 
girls.

Then our enemy struck again.  One of the teams heard shots and raced to the 
top of a ridge overlooking the area the shots came from.

Below them, they saw a black GMC pickup, one of the big ones.  A guy wearing 
sunglasses was just getting into it.  The vehicle moved slowly away as they 
watched, rolling towards the county road, almost a mile away.

Being on top of the ridge, they called in with their radio.  After calling 
for about five minutes, Aunt Elin heard them and took their message, 
including their location and the direction of the pickup.

Nobody was close enough to get to the place the pickup would reach the road. 
  We would have someone near our own driveway, though, to try to get a plate 
number if he came out that way.

Grandma took her battered little Toyota, and pulled it around in our ranch 
driveway entrance.  Then she stood by the mailbox, as if she was checking 
our mail.  But no one came by except the mailman, so she came back to the 
house.
Two young steers had been shot.  It wasn't too great a loss, as they were 
both 'culls' from our Angus breeding program.  Even so, we didn't welcome 
it.  We were able to salvage the carcasses and they fed our 'kids patrol' 
some pretty good steaks most of the next month.

A week later, the kids in the adjoining sector heard shots one morning.  
Coming down a dry wash, they came upon a guy with a rifle under his arm.  
The girl in the team had her weapon up and ordered the guy to drop his 
rifle.  She had a downhill shot and wasn't sure what was beyond him.  So 
when he moved suddenly, she didn't shoot.  That was costly.

The guy swung the rifle to his hip and shot twice.  The first shot took the 
girl in the leg.  The second cut the air where her boyfriend had been a 
moment before.

The boy had sense enough to shuck his rifle from the scabbard and roll off 
his horse when the first shot rang out.

He tried to hit the man who'd shot his girl, but couldn't get a decent shot 
at him.  There was a lot of automatic fire returned at them.  One of their 
horses was killed.  Wisely, both kids stayed down, not willing to wade into 
it.
When it was all over, the boy bound his girl's leg, helped her onto the 
remaining horse, and led them to the top of the ridge, where he called for 
help.

Dad and I--the whole family, really--were pretty pissed off.  Sure we lived 
in the west.  But it was years ago that the last of the 'Wild West' had 
vanished.  We'd handled Schwartz, when he tried to ambush Audry and me.  
Earlier, we'd handled Marston.  But those were aberrations.  That wasn't 
supposed to be the way things were.  Now we had another shooter, who 
apparently targeted our ranch, and who didn't hesitate to shoot people.  
This was the third one!  It was just too damn much!

The sheriff agreed.

We stopped to see him after we dropped the girl at the hospital.  
Fortunately, she would be fine.  But her wound was painful, and would keep 
her from riding much for several weeks--which was more painful to her and to 
her boyfriend than anything else.

The only motive for the attacks, as far as we could see, was spite.  The 
three families who had attacked us before, because they saw us as 
impediments to their social aspirations, were completely discredited and too 
busy trying to salvage their financial status from the ruins to bother us.  
None of this was logical.  But terrorist acts seldom are.  And that's what 
this was; terrorist acts against our family.

Our sheriff requested assistance from other law enforcement agencies to 
determine exactly where the three families were located.  They all drew a 
blank.  As far as anyone could tell, they were all too busy trying to 
rebuild their fortunes and restore their social standing to be concerned 
with us.
But they couldn't account for the Schwartz boys...

We knew all about one of them.  His bones rested on a knob in the national 
forest overlooking our ranch.  We urgently requested information about the 
other one.


John Schwartz was the outlaw of an outlaw family.  Before he turned sixteen, 
he'd gotten into it with his dad, who finally told him to either do as he 
was told or get out.  The kid got out; moving in with an uncle in northern 
California.  The uncle had a large vegetable farm, just south of Redding.
After three years, the kid had started to come on real hard to his cousin, 
who'd just turned 13.  His uncle told him to knock it off...  He refused, 
they argued, and he left again.  This time for Colorado, where he sold lift 
tickets at a ski resort.

He was always something of a loner, not by choice, but because he liked to 
drink.  When he did, he rapidly got really obnoxious.  Sober, he had 
opinions he held very strongly, even though his reasons were half-baked at 
best and often inconsistent.  Not a combination to make a big lout into a 
popular guy.
No one knew where he was.

We had a pretty good idea.


					~~  * * * * *  ~~


John Schwartz was really pissed off!

His latest girl had left town while he was at work, cleaning out the cash 
he'd stashed in his hidden spot in his closet.

It never occurred to him that it was because he'd beat the shit out of her 
the night before, blacking both eyes and cracking a rib.  She wasn't the 
type to go to the law--she just cleaned him out and left town.

He had a payment due on his Jimmy truck.  Well, it would be late.  Tough 
shit!  What did the damn finance company expect?  That he wouldn't eat?

His next day off was Tuesday.  With Gloria gone, he might as well go up to 
the hills and shoot another cow--maybe he could get one of those fancy 
horses this time.  Those assholes had fucked with his family.  And they'd 
been behind his brother's disappearance, too.  They had it coming.

That little cunt thought she had the drop on him last week.  Shit!  He knew 
she was too hoity-toity to really shoot him.  He hoped he'd drilled her 
through the chest.  She was too dumb to live and deserved what she got.  Her 
boyfriend--a worthless fuckin' Indian--had panicked and hadn't known what to 
do.  If he'd been on the ball, John would have been dead meat.

John laughed at the memory.  The little shit had probably wet himself.

Feeling better, he threw a couple of blankets in his truck and called the 
answering machine at work, to tell the boss he would be gone two days, 
instead of the one he had off.  The boss would be pissed but wouldn't fire 
him--help was too hard to come by.  He called in, didn't he?

John would drive out to the ranch, find a secluded spot to spend the night, 
and see if he couldn't get himself a horse the next morning.


Everybody at the ranch was pretty pissed off, too.  Gary and Mary and 
another dozen adults and teens joined us.  We were all patrolling 
vigorously, loaded for bear.  By then it was late in the summer and the 
hands, with a couple of teens helping them, were rounding up the cattle, to 
bring them back to the home ranch before deer season.


John found himself a narrow canyon in the side of a large hill that he could 
drive right into, but that had some cottonwoods and aspen, and a little 
creek.  He pulled his pickup off to the side of the trail that led into it 
and made a fire by the creek.  He often slept in his truck, but it was such 
a nice night, he'd just sleep on the soft flat dirt near the creek.

During the night, he thought he heard the sound of horses.  Maybe it was his 
dreams.

In the morning, he climbed the side of the draw and looked around.  In the 
next little valley beyond the finger he was on was a horse, wandering 
around, feeding on the grass.  He looked around, but not up.  He didn't see 
anyone and thinking, 'This is too easy!' he shot the horse, then returned to 
his camp.
He didn't see two figures on horseback, on the mountainside far above him.
The two kids were amazed and sickened by what they saw.  The guy casually 
shot a horse, then strolled back to his camp.  Looking at the camp through 
their binoculars, they could see that he was a real slob.  His fire could 
easily have spread.  And he just threw his trash wherever.

As they watched, he stretched out on his filthy blankets and went to sleep.


We got the radio call right away.  I'd been out, helping the hands gather 
the cows for the short drive to the ranch.  Audry called me.  "Rob.  I think 
the kids have found him."

I asked them for the location again, until I was certain I knew exactly 
where they were.  When I realized that he was camped right on the trail, I 
grinned.  It was not a friendly expression.

"What are you going to do, Rob?" Audry demanded, fairly urgently.

"Why, I'm just going to give him more cows than he can handle," I said.

Dad and Uncle Rick were called.  They rapidly arranged the volunteers along 
the sides of both fingers that bounded the little canyon our enemy was 
sleeping in.  They took the head of the draw, where the trail crested out of 
it, themselves.
With the hands and four of the teens--two of the girls said they couldn't 
shoot anybody, but they wanted to participate--I started moving the cattle 
from the leased range.  In a couple of hours, we had the herd well on its 
way.  Just as I saw the mouth of the draw, Uncle Rick called to tell me our 
guy was awake and moving.

We were a half-hour away with the herd.

John Schwartz was awakened from his nap by the sound of hooves again... a 
lot of hooves.  Sitting up, he couldn't hear anything and decided it was a 
dream.

He was too much of a city boy to understand how the ground carries sound 
better than the air.

John thought it was time to see if any more of our stock was around to be 
shot at.  So he started to climb the other slope, to see what might be on 
the opposite side of the other finger.  When he was near the top of the 
slope, a shot rang out, and the tree in front of him sent slivers flying.  
Dropping, and slipping, cussing like a sailor the whole way, he rolled to 
the bottom of the slope.

'Maybe it is time to get the hell out of here,' he thought.  But when he 
approached his pickup, two shots rang out.  One destroyed his windshield and 
the other blew out a front tire.  Then another shot hit the dirt right by 
his shoes.

He ran up the draw, by his fire.  Alongside the open trail--that he was too 
stupid to recognize as a trail--was a log.  He lay down behind it, on the 
side away from the shots--putting his body right in the trail.

When the lead cows, all full-grown Black Angus, were in the mouth of the 
draw, we stampeded the herd.  I hated to do it, since it would run off 
several hundred dollars worth of meat, but it was worth the effort.

The herd bounded up the draw and stomped John pretty thoroughly, before he 
could drag himself over the log that was 'shielding' him.

Right behind them with my cowboys, I was pleased to see that his rifle was 
lying in the trail, broken.  It was an AK, just like Gary said.

Dad called down from the ridgetop, when we pulled up by the pickup, "He's 
behind that log, by his rifle.  He's a polecat, so be careful with him."

Riding up to the log, five rifles leveled at it, I commanded him to come 
out.
"Can't," I heard from behind it.

"Do or die," I said, coldly.

"Can't.  Legs busted."

"Crawl, fucker!  If I don't see all of you, we start shooting into that log 
until we've shot it to splinters."

With a groan, John heaved himself over the log.  I'm surprised he could.  
His legs were a pulverized mess.  And he'd taken a few hooves in the ribs, 
both back and front, too.

He just lay there and glared at us.

I put a couple of the kids to work changing the tire on his pickup.

"What's your name?" I demanded.

"Fuck you," he said.

I kicked him in a knee, the pain causing him to pass out.  I had one of the 
kids dump some water on him.

When he was awake again, I said, "What's your name?"

"I said: Fuck you."

He had more guts than sense...  I guess we knew that.  I calmly kicked him 
again.  In the ribs this time, where I'd break something, but not cause him 
to pass out.  I was wrong.  He passed out.  Ribs broke, though.


While he was out, I searched him.  I took a large knife from his back, 
between the shoulder blades.  And another knife from his belt.  His boots 
were clean, and he didn't carry a handgun on him--there was a big .357 
magnum revolver in his truck though.  Looked like it had never been 
fired--or cleaned.

His billfold gave his name--proving it was a revenge thing.

Why those eastern assholes couldn't learn from their mistakes was beyond me.

We sent the kids off to round up the cows and shag them on to the pasture.  
Two of our own hands went along to supervise them.  Dad, Uncle Rick and I 
stood over our captive.

"You know, Rick, there's nothing I hate worse than a man who is such a 
coward he only fights from ambush.  Unless it's a man who only ambushes 
cattle... or girls."

"Know what you mean.  We used to hang horse thieves.  This guy is worse.  He 
stole 'em by shooting 'em...  By my way of reckoning, that means hangin's 
too good for him."

"Kinda thought that, myself, Rick.  I sorta thought we'd maybe drag him a 
ways, then just leave him."

"Drag him by the neck?" I asked.  John's face, pale from his injuries, went 
white.

"Not a bad idea.  But this polecat ain't goin' nowhere."

"True.  Do we just leave him?"

"Not a chance.  He'd come back, if he survived.  We'd best turn him over to 
the sheriff."

Carefully, we made sure he had his billfold and keys.  We did take his 
knives, pistol, and rifle--wouldn't want him attacking our stock or hands.

Cheerfully, dad said, "Stay put, John Schwartz.  We'll have the sheriff out 
here to pick you up..."

"By the way," I told him, pointing, "your brother is on top of that knob, 
two ridges over.  He tried to shoot me.  I shot better."

John's face turned white again.  "You're not going to leave me here, like 
this?"

"Why not?  We'll tell the sheriff where to find you."

What with one thing and another, it was three days before any of us 
'remembered' to call the sheriff.  John had managed to drag himself into his 
truck.  For some reason it wouldn't start.  He didn't have the strength to 
check under the hood, where the ignition wires were loose enough they 
wouldn't make connections, but not so you could tell just looking at them.

The deputy drove him to the morgue in his own pickup.

We sued his estate for the value of the stock he'd killed.  All we ever got 
out of it was his pickup truck.

Mom's family, Virginia 'old money' patricians, made a point of having their 
lawyer pass on to John's parents that we'd string up any Schwartz kin on our 
place.  We were really tired of fucking with them.  They got kind of excited 
and wanted to know about the younger son.  The lawyer didn't know.  He only 
knew about his instructions to pass along the message that we were through 
fucking with their family.

He did add that he would be passing the message to the Olsens, in Chicago, 
too.  Their friends in Virginia had disappeared.



* Cattleman's Woe is the fourth in the series of Audry stories.  (c) 1997, 
2001, Extar International, Ltd. All rights reserved. Single copies for 
personal, non-commercial use may be downloaded or printed. Any other uses, 
including reposting, or posting on an archive site, must have prior 
permission from Extar International. Comments always welcome.  
<extar@hotmail.com>


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