The Flockmaster of Poison Creek
Neither spoke, a daze over them, the dull shock of death’s close passing bewildering and deep. Page 120
Made in the United States of America
Copyright A. C. McClurg & Co. 1921
Published March, 1921
Copyrighted in Great Britain
1
So John Mackenzie had put his foot upon the road. This after he had reasoned it out as a mathematical problem, considering it as a matter of quantities alone. There was nothing in school-teaching at sixty dollars a month when men who had to carry a rubber stamp to sign their names to their checks were making fortunes all around him in sheep.
That was the way it looked to John Mackenzie the morning he set out for Poison Creek to hunt up Tim Sullivan and strike him for a job. Against the conventions of the country, he had struck out on foot. That also had been reasoned out in a cool and calculative way. A sheepherder had no use for a horse, in the first place. Secondly and finally, the money a horse would represent would buy at least twelve head of ewes. With questioning eyes upon him when he left Jasper, and contemptuous eyes upon him when he met riders in his dusty journey, John Mackenzie had pushed on, his pack on his back.
There was not a book in that pack. John Mackenzie, 2 schoolmaster, had been a bondslave of books in that country for four obscure, well-nigh profitless years, and he was done with them for a while. The less a sheepman knew about books, the more he was bound to know about sheep, for sheep would be the object and aim of his existence. Mackenzie knew plenty of sheepmen who never had looked into any kind of a book but a bank-deposit book in their lives. That seemed to be education enough to carry them very nicely along, even to boost them to the state legislature, and lift one of them to the United States senate. So, what was the use of worrying along on a mission of enlightenment at sixty dollars a month?
Mackenzie had not come into the West in a missionary spirit at the beginning. He had not believed the youth of that section to be in any greater depths of ignorance than elsewhere in this more or less favored land. But from his earliest years he had entertained romantic notions, adventurous desires. With his normal-school certificate in his breast pocket, tight trousers on his rather long legs, a short vest scarcely meeting them at the waistband, he had traveled into the West, seeking romance, alert for adventure.
George W. Ogden
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CONTENTS
The Flockmaster of Poison Creek
CHAPTER I
THE SHEEP COUNTRY
CHAPTER II
SWAN CARLSON
CHAPTER III
THE FIGHT
CHAPTER IV
KEEPER OF THE FLOCK
CHAPTER V
TIM SULLIVAN
CHAPTER VI
EYES IN THE FIRELIGHT
CHAPTER VII
THE EASIEST LESSON
CHAPTER VIII
THE SHEEP-KILLER
CHAPTER IX
A TWO-GUN MAN
CHAPTER X
WILD RIDERS OF THE RANGE
CHAPTER XI
HECTOR HALL SETS A BEACON
CHAPTER XII
ONE COMES TO SERVE
CHAPTER XIII
A FIGHT ALMOST LOST
CHAPTER XIV
THE LONESOMENESS
CHAPTER XV
ONLY ONE JACOB
CHAPTER XVI
REID BEGINS HIS PLAY
CHAPTER XVII
HERTHA CARLSON
CHAPTER XVIII
SWAN CARLSON’S DAY
CHAPTER XIX
NOT CUT OUT FOR A SHEEPMAN
CHAPTER XX
A MILLION GALLOPS OFF
CHAPTER XXI
TIM SULLIVAN BREAKS A CONTRACT
CHAPTER XXII
PHANTOMS OF FEVER
CHAPTER XXIII
CONCERNING MARY
CHAPTER XXIV
MORE ABOUT MARY
CHAPTER XXV
ONE MAN’S JOKE
CHAPTER XXVI
PAYMENT ON ACCOUNT
CHAPTER XXVII
A SUMMONS IN THE NIGHT
CHAPTER XXVIII
SWAN CARLSON LAUGHS
CHAPTER XXIX
SHEEPMAN––AND MORE