"What"s that?" demanded a gruff voice below. "Sounded like somebody sneezing."
"No, it"s an owl," replied another. "I"ve heard that kind before. Sometimes you"d think it was a fellow snoring."
"Must be funny kind of a bird," grunted the first speaker.
"He"s right. That"s exactly what I am," growled Tad, who had plainly overheard their conversation. Yet he was thankful that the men below had not realized the truth. Tad was quite willing to be mistaken for a bird under the circ.u.mstances.
After making sure that the men were not going to investigate the sound, the boy crept again toward the edge, working to the right a little further this time, so that the smoke might not smite him full in the face as had been the case before.
There were four of them--strangers. The boy observed that they were dressed like cowboys, broad brimmed hats, blue shirts and all. From the belt of each was suspended a holster from which protruded the b.u.t.t of a heavy revolver.
"Cowboys," he breathed. "At least they ought to be and I hope they are nothing else."
The lad"s attention was fixed particularly on one of the party. He was all of six feet tall, powerfully built, his swarthy face covered with a scraggly growth of red beard, and with a face of a peculiarly sinister appearance.
"When do they expect the herd?" asked the first speaker.
"Be here the day after tomorrer I reckon," answered the man with the red beard.
"How many?"
"They say there"s five thousand sheep in the herd, but it"s more"n likely there"ll be ten when they git here."
"Huh!" grunted the other.
"There"ll be less when we git through with them."
"You bet."
"Boss Simms will be mad. He"ll be ripping, when we clean him out."
Two of the men rose at the big fellow"s direction and stalked off into the bushes to attend to their ponies, which the lad could hear stirring restlessly, but could not see.
"Simms!" breathed Tad. "What does this mean? Those men are up to some mischief. I know it. I must find out what it is they are planning to do."
Tad learned a few moments later, but in his attempts to overhear what the plans of these strange men were, he nearly lost his own life.
CHAPTER VIII
INTO THE ENEMY"S CAMP
"Has Simms been warned that he"d better keep them out of this here territory?" asked one.
"Yes."
"Who told him?"
"Bob Moore, who owns the Double X Ranch on the west side of the range. I saw to that," announced the man with the beard.
Tad decided that he was the leader of the party, but it was not yet clear what they were planning to do. Yet he knew that if he listened long enough something was sure to be dropped that would give him a clue to the mystery.
"Bob"s mad as a trapped bear over it. Swears he"ll kill every sheep in the country before he"ll let Simms drive in the new herd and graze it here."
"Suppose you put it into his head proper like to do something?"
laughed one.
"Well, I did talk it over with him a bit," admitted the leader. "But he wasn"t hard to show."
"When is the thing coming off?"
"We haven"t decided yet. We four will talk that over. Perhaps the same night they get in. They"ll be restless then and easy to start."
"But won"t the foreman corral the sheep?"
"Don"t think so. Haven"t room. They haven"t fixed up a new corral, because they expected to graze the sheep on north. That many will clean up the range right straight ahead of us for more"n a hundred miles, so that we cattle men won"t have half a chance to graze our cattle," grinned the spokesman of the party.
His companions laughed harshly.
"I reckon," answered another. "We"ll have all the cattle men on both sides of the Rosebud range so stirred up that they will pitch into that flock like hyenas who haven"t had a square meal since snow fell last. When they break loose there"s going to be fun, now I tell you. That"s the time we get busy. We ought to be able to get a thousand of them anyhow. Before next morning we"ll be so far down toward the Big Horn range that they won"t catch us. And besides, after the cattle men get through killing mutton, a thousand more or less won"t be missed. It"ll make a nice bunch to add to our flock.
If we work that a few times we"ll have enough to make a shipment worth while."
"So that"s the game is it?" muttered Tad Butler. "Well, they won"t do it if I can help it." Yet be realized how powerless he was at that moment to defeat their nefarious plans.
Somehow they were going to urge the real cattle men to use highhanded measures to destroy Mr. Simms"s flock. They were going to scatter them, and then these men were going to make off with all they could drive away. It did not seem to the listening boy that such things were possible; yet Mr. Simms was authority for the statement that such acts were not unknown in this far northern state.
There were still many points that Tad was not clear on, but he had heard enough to enable him to give the rancher a timely warning of what they proposed to do.
The lad knew what that meant. It meant trouble. His sympathies had been largely with the cattle men--he had looked down on the sheep industry and for the reason that he knew only what the cattle men had told him about it.
At that moment Tad Butler was experiencing a change of heart. That they could plan ruthlessly to slaughter the inoffensive little animals pa.s.sed his comprehension. A remark below him caused the lad to p.r.i.c.k up his ears and listen intently.
"As I came over the Little Muddy this afternoon, I thought I saw some sort of a camp in the foothills," said a voice. "Thought mebby that might be the outfit, though I couldn"t see what they were doing on that side of the range."
"Oh," laughed the big man, "I know the one you mean. Yes, I took a look at that outfit myself."
"Oh, he did, eh? Wonder we didn"t see him," grunted Tad, realizing that the men referred to the camp of the Pony Riders. "There was something besides bears around there, I see."
"Find out what it was!"
"Yes, it seemed to be a camp of boys. There was only one man in the bunch so far as I could see. He was a tall gent with whiskers that hadn"t been shaved for two weeks o" Sundays."
Tad could not repress a laugh.
"I wish the boys could hear that," he said, laughing softly. "That hits off the Professor better than a real picture could do."