“He don’t,” Dud answered ungrammatically but promptly. “His bronc ’tends to that. If you try to guide you’re sure enough liable to take a fall.”
“But when the hole’s covered with grass?”
“You gotta take a chance,” Dud said. “They’re sure-footed, these cowponies are. A fellow gets to thinkin’ they can’t fall. Then down he goes. He jumps clear if he can an’ lights loose.”
“And if he can’t?”
“He’s liable to get stove up. I seen five waddies yesterday in Bear Cat with busted legs or arms. Doc’s fixin’ ’em up good as new. In a week or two they’ll be ridin’ again.”
Bob had seen those same crippled cowboys and he could not quite get them out of his mind. He knew of two punchers killed within the year from falls.
“Ridin’ for a dogie outfit ain’t no sin-cure, as Blister told you while he was splicin’ you ’n’ Miss Tolliver,” Dud went on. “It’s a man-size job. There’s ol’ Charley Mason now. He’s had his ribs stove in, busted an arm, shot hisself by accident, got rheumatism, had his nose bit off by a railroad guy while he was b’iled, an’ finally married a female battle-axe, all inside o’ two years. He’s the hard luck champeen, though, Charley is.”
It had snowed heavily during the night. The day was “soft,” in the phrase of the pioneer. In places the ground was almost clear. In others the drifts were deep. From a hillside they looked down into a grove of cottonwoods that filled a small draw. Here the snow had blown in and was heavy. Three elk were floundering in the white banks.
Dud waded in and shot two with his revolver. The third was a doe. The cowponies snaked them out to the open.
“We’ll take ’em with us to ’Leven Mile camp,” Dud said. “Then we’ll carry ’em back to the ranch to-morrow. The Slash Lazy D is needin’ meat.”