a few miles more I'll call it a day's work and 
quit. We've done pretty well, and if Low Bull would have done his 
share, we'd be nearer the ranch than we are now. I don't want any better 
round-up men than Nesting Henderson and the rest, but we need 
another man, and that's why I had to take Low Bull along. But I'll know 
better next time." 
"Never mind, Billy. I'll see if I can't keep him on the go," said Roy, and, 
with a ringing shout, to hurry up some lagging steers, he touched his 
horse lightly with the spurs, and dashed toward where the Indian was 
making a half-hearted effort to keep his division of the drive from 
straggling. 
"I've come to help you, Low Bull," announced Roy, as he reached the 
side of the Indian. 
"Hu! Boy heap smart!" grunted the redman. "Steers like boy--go fast 
now." 
In fact it seemed as if the cattle knew some one was now behind them 
who would keep them on the move, for they quickened their pace. 
"I don't know whether they like me or not," remarked Roy, with a laugh 
that showed his white teeth in contrast to his bronzed skin, "for I reckon 
if I happened to fall off my horse they'd trample over me mighty quick; 
they sure would." 
"Hu! Mebby so. Steers no like men not on hoss," spoke Low Bull, 
stating a fact well known among cattlemen, for the steers of the plains 
are so used to seeing a man on a horse, that once a cowboy is 
dismounted the cattle become frightened, and are liable to stampede, 
and trample the unfortunate man to death. 
"Billy says we must hurry the steers along," went on Roy. "We're going
to camp pretty soon, and he wants to get to the ranch as soon as 
possible, though I guess it will take us two days more." 
"No need so much rush," said Low Bull. "Go slow be better. Boy drive 
steers now, Low Bull take smoke and think. Low Bull much tired." 
"I guess he was born that way," thought Roy, as he saw the redman 
start to make a cigarette, a habit he had learned from the white cowboys. 
Low Bull was soon smoking in peace and comfort, while he let his 
pony amble along at its own sweet will. The Indian gave no further 
thought to the cattle, leaving the management of the stragglers to Roy, 
and the lad had to dash here and there on his nimble pony, shouting and 
waving his lariat, to keep the lagging steers up with the rest of the herd. 
However, Roy was so full of life, and took so much interest in his work, 
that he did not mind doing Low Bull's share, as well as his own. 
"That's just like that lazy Indian," remarked Billy Carew, as he 
observed, from a distance, what Roy was doing. "He'll let the boy do all 
the work. I'll discharge him after this round-up, that's what I'll do. 
Might have known better than to hire one of them copper-skins!" 
Roy, whose father owned the Triple O ranch, had come out on this 
round-up about a week previously. On all big ranches it is the custom, 
at stated intervals to send out a party of men to round-up, or gather 
together, in herds, the cattle or horses that may have strayed to distant 
pastures. 
Sometimes a week or more is spent on this work, the men sleeping out 
of doors, and making camp wherever darkness overtakes them. During 
the night they take turns riding around the cattle, to keep them from 
straying away. 
Day by day the herd is driven nearer the ranch, until they are either 
placed in corrals, which are big pens, or are counted, brands put on the 
new calves, and turned out again, to roam about over the immense 
pastures, and fatten up for the market. 
Mr. Bradner was an extensive ranch owner, and had several herds of
cattle. He was considered quite wealthy, but he had made his money by 
hard work, having very little when he first went out west with his wife 
and little boy. His wife had died soon after he reached Colorado, and, 
after his baby days, Roy had been brought up by his father. 
The boy liked the life on the ranch, and was fast becoming an expert 
along cattle lines. He was a good judge of steers and horses, and, while 
he knew nothing of city ways, never since a mere infant having been in 
anything larger than a town, and not having traveled more than a few 
miles, there was nothing about life on the plains but what he was 
acquainted with. 
After much hard riding Roy managed to get that    
    
		
	
	
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