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the county seat, from which we emerged forth on necessary occasions to soothe whatever fracases and unrest that might occur in our jurisdiction. Skipping over much what happened while me and Luke was sheriff, I want to give you an idea of how the law was respected in them days. Luke was what you would call one of the most conscious men in the world. He never knew much book law, but he had the inner emoluments of justice and mercy inculcated into his system. If a respectable citizen shot a Mexican or held up a train and cleaned out the safe in the express car, and Luke ever got hold of him, hed give the guilty party such a reprimand and a cussin out that hed probable never do it again. But once let somebody steal a horse (unless it was a Spanish pony), or cut a wire fence, or otherwise impair the peace and indignity of Mojada County, Luke and me would be onem with habeas corpuses and smokeless powder and all the modern inventions of equity and etiquette. We certainly had our county on a basis of lawfulness. Ive known persons of Eastern classification with little spotted caps and buttoned-up shoes to get off the train at Bildad and eat sandwiches at the railroad station without being shot at or even roped and drug about by the citizens of the town. Luke had his own ideas of legality and justice. He was kind of training me to succeed him when he went out of office. He was always looking ahead to the time when hed quit sheriffing. What he wanted to do was to build a yellow house with lattice-work under the porch and have hens scratching in the yard. The one main thing in his mind seemed to be the yard. Bud, he says to me, by instinct and sentiment Im a contractor. I want to be a contractor. Thats what Ill be when I get out of office. What kind of a contractor? says I. It sounds like a kind of a business to me. You aint going to haul cement or establish branches or work on a railroad, are you? You dont understand, says Luke. Im tired of space and horizons and territory and distances and things like that. What I want is reasonable contraction. I want a yard with a fence around it that you can go out and set on after supper and listen to whip-poor-wills, says Luke. Thats the kind of a man he was. He was home-like, although hed had bad luck in such investments. But he never talked about them times on the ranch. It seemed like hed forgotten about it. I wondered how, with his ideas of yards and chickens and notions of lattice-work, hed seemed to have got out of his mind that kid of his that had been taken away from him, unlawful, in spite of his decree of court. But he wasnt a man you could ask about such things as he didnt refer to in his own conversation. I reckon hed put all his emotions and ideas into being sheriff. Ive read in books about men that was disappointed in these poetic and fine-haired and high-collared affairs with ladies renouncing truck of that kind and wrapping themselves up into some occupation like painting pictures, or herding sheep, or science, or teaching schoolsomething to make em forget. Well, I guess that was the way with Luke. But, as he couldnt paint pictures, he took it out in rounding up horse-thieves and in making Mojada County a safe place to sleep in if you was well armed and not afraid of requisitions or tarantulas. One day there passes through Bildad a bunch of these money investors from the East, and they stopped off there, Bildad being the dinner station on the I. & G. N. They was just coming back from Mexico looking after mines and such. There was five of emfour solid parties, with gold watch-chains, that would grade up over two hundred pounds on the hoof, and one kid about seventeen or eighteen. This youngster had on one of them cowboy suits such as tenderfoots bring West with em; and you could see he was aching to wing a couple of Indians or bag a grizzly or two with the little pearl-handled gun he had buckled around his waist. |
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