《Other West: Diablero》Chapter Four
Advertisement
Van sat atop his mount, watching the bustle of activity with squinted eyes. With old Fort Lyon behind them, they entered the Zuni Mountains. The land sprawled out before him, the broad scrubland covered in sage and rabbitbrush. Broken mesas rose from the valley floor veiled in shades of blue and violet with distance, dotted by pygmy cedars. The stink of cattle and the fine canyon dust filled his throat and nostrils, even through his red bandana. He squeezed his nose and adjusted the cloth higher on his bridge. His black gloves caked a gray orange.
“Still thinking about the Gasento family?” Teven trotted his lathered horse around Van.
Van smiled. Not that Teven could see it. “These are former Gasento lands.”
His horse reined, Teven freed his canteen and drank deeply.
Van did likewise, the water absorbed into the back of his parched throat. A pleasant, sensation of relief shivered through his torso. “Juan Semos hired brush poppers to ferret out the beeves. We've seen no brands for the past week now.”
Teven nodded. “That they'd be dumb enough to steal Gasento, or other branded Mexican or Texan cattle?” He shrugged. “I'm thinking of the slavery.”
Van took another draught from his canteen.
The British abolished slavery before Van's birth. The Spanish too, yet here in the United States, and the unknown fastness of the frontier, human decency remained illusive.
Van and Teven watched the vaqueros guide the longhorns, as Juan Semos directed the drovers. Nathan sat nearby, within the Chuck wagon, splitting his time over the past several days between scouting and cooking.
“I commissioned these from the blacksmith.” Van opened the leather tool roll and showed Teven the four cattle brands. He gestured over the clouds of dust obscuring the cattle and herders. “Once we've gathered the rouge cattle, we'll brand each before starting the drive north out of Santa Fe.”
Numerous herds of free-roaming Spanish cattle, the old colonial Criollo breed, wandered the fastness of the New Mexico territory. The wild cattle, mainly brown with a light stripe down their backs and long, slim blue horns, proved anything but docile.
The Longhorn did not have many enemies. The tribes preferred the meat of the tamer and easier to kill buffalo, finding more uses for buffalo hides and bones than for Longhorn leather. Wolves that followed the migrating buffalo herds remained shy and wary of the mean, and often deadly, Longhorn cattle.
Teven hefted one of the branding irons. “Lot of work.”
Van replaced his bandana over his nose as he let his canteen hang on its saddle strap. “Nathan says the Semos cousins and their fellows will manage just fine.”
“Care to test your roping skills against them?” Teven said.
“I’m better with a whip than a lariat.”
Teven shrugged. “Days of it then, but if the herd scatters on account of the matter, it'll be a whole lot longer. One longhorn causes a panic? And who's to say any rustlers or tribes what thieve will care what brand we put on them?”
Van shifted in his saddle and touched his temple. “I'm more concerned about the Comanche. They're more likely to take us than care for the herd.”
*
Christian sat atop his gelding as Sende tended to the spare horses within their temporary corral of stakes and rope. Far from the gathered herd, the dust clung low to the ground, yet not so low as to escape it atop a mount. The mixed remuda of pinto and sorrel, with typical bay among them, stood easy enough, removed as they were from the confusion of the herd and drovers.
Advertisement
Christian dismounted. “What are you running from?”
Sende turned, her surprise contained, yet with a frown creasing her brow and her head cast about with caution. “Running?”
“We know you were a servant to the Gasento family, but why’d you run now?”
Sende cut her eyes at Christian.
Christian raised a gloved hand. “I don't mean to offend.”
A young vaquero arrived from the herd atop a lathered mount.
Christian turned on the man. “Damn it son, that there ride is dragged out. Don't work the next one so damned long, twig?”
The drover, older than Christian, glanced at Sende, nodded, and dismounted.
Sende eyed a bay gelding and approached it from behind and to its side. With a quick but gentle overhand throw she brought the loop of her lariat over the animal's head, settling it down around the neck. The bay protested until Sende lay her free hand along its muzzle. The horse turned to face her and she led it to the young vaquero as his new mount.
She glanced at Christian. “We are riding through Gasento land.” She gestured around them with her free arm. “My family worked with the Gasentos. They herded sheep and cattle, but I was very much a slave. Not a servant to Galtero Gasento.”
Christian removed the saddle and gear from the tired workhorse as the vaquero took the fresh mount from Sende.
“Your brother and Señor Van are rancheros?”
Christian looked up from the piled gear. “Those two? We all grew up together. Van’s as much my brother as Teven, but they've seen things, horrid things. That's why we all came over here. From England. To get away from the shadows of the old world. Ancient horrors from the other side of the Veil.”
Sende turned away from Christian, her lariat dangled from her right hand. “That is what I am running from also.”
*
Three miles ahead of the herd, Nathan stooped over the night's future fire pit when a noise from inside the chuck wagon drew his attention. He jogged around to the back of the wagon and found Day Long’s rear-end. The Black Seminole was bent over the covered wagon’s rear sideboard as he rummaged through the foodstuffs.
“What are you doing?”
A muffled snicker rose from within the wagon among the cluttered noise of shifted sacks and crates.
“Somethings never change.” Nathan said, pulling Day Long by the boots. “Get down from there.”
Day Long spun and landed in a casual hop, his arms full of packs of sour dough and biscuits. He also had several packets of Abajo corn paste mixed with honey and dried berries.
The two men stared at each other.
“Maybe that Katz fella was right.”
Nathan frowned. “Pardon?”
“You could be my wife, you look purty in that apron, but it's the hair—dem silver gold locks.”
Nathan snatched at the supplies. “Always fillin’ your belly!”
Day Long danced around him. “I ain't banded, hunger don't rule me.”
“Since when?” Nathan said. “You're always gnawing on something.”
“Naw, this is for me an’ the tail riders.” He laughed at his own pun. “We ain't gonna be eatin’ but dung and dust every day followin’ the herd. Gonna be candlelight soon, what's your say?”
Nathan sighed, stepping aside with an arm raised toward Day Long’s nearby mount. The Black Seminole grinned and walked to his steel blue grulla. He packed the supplies into his saddle bags and mounted the horse.
Advertisement
“Kinda scout are you, couldn't hear me ride up on you?” Day Long laughed and spurred the grulla into a canter.
“Done snuck up on me like the scout you are!” Nathan called after him, throwing his hand in a dismissive gesture behind him as he returned to preparing the evening meal.
*
Teven stretched his back and shifted in the saddle after another long day on the trail. Ahead, the sky grew dulled with the approach of twilight. Behind, the herd stretched back two miles. It would all begin again tomorrow. The steers left to graze each morning and led down the trail to familiarize the cattle to the drive.
They'd found the dominant steer early. Every drive gained its dominant steer, which by instinct claimed its place at the front of the herd to lead the way. Its name already chosen, “Red”, would not be sold; he would be brought home to St. Maria to lead the other herds north in future seasons. This morning, the cattle began to follow Red, led by the point riders. In addition to the two point riders beside Red, the swing and flank riders rode on each side of the herd. The swing riders about one-third of the way back. The flank riders two-thirds. Finally, Day Long and the tail riders rode behind the herd in the cloud of dust and stench that followed.
Van trotted up beside Teven on a black gelding. “There's a watering hole and a goodly stretch of grasses ahead. Nathan's already set camp.”
Teven bobbed his bowler hat and ran a hand through his coarse brown hair. “Seems all we do. Not much different to seaboard life. Routine, endless horizon, wide open skies.”
Van took up his canteen. “I'd do with a salty sea breeze about now, but you're right, we spent more time below decks then upon the rigs.”
Teven shrugged. “That business at Red Clay has you thinking about Azov?”
Van took a swig from his canteen. Swallowed. Licked his lips.
Teven raised an eyebrow. “Not what you thought it would be?”
Van balanced the canteen on the saddle, his hands crossed over it and shrugged. “Of all of us, not counting the Semos family, Aleya is best suited for this.”
“She was raised out here?”
Van nodded. “Just about. Came out here with her parents. Schooling back east, but she loves it.”
Teven frowned. “Don't you? This was all your idea.”
“Of course. Still, we seem to have finished one war only to find another here.”
Teven shook his head. “That's back East.”
“I want a fresh start for all of us. I don't expect it to be easy. Out here, away from the empires and cities, there's hope, at least during our lives, to live as we see fit.”
“Farming wasn't enough? I understand you wanting to settle as far into the frontier as possible, but this is a big change from home.”
“A big change from Wales, but overseeing a copper business is only another form of empire. My father does that well enough.” Van straightened. “You've yet to say. Are you all in? The plan is sound, we establish the ranch, build the herd to two, maybe three, thousand strong each year. If we drive these longhorns north, to Denver, and the rest clear round and back to St. Maria…”
The boys followed a circle route from the Grand Valley of Colorado, west into Utah and south through the lands of the Abajo, into the New Mexico territory and northern Texas to gather cattle. Skirting the lands of the Comancheria, they'd drive most of the herd to Denver, then further north through the plains and fatten the remaining cattle for the mountain journey west through Wyoming, south, back to Utah, and east into the Grand Valley.
Teven raised his hand. “I've no doubt we can, but my concern is Jessica. Does she truly want to leave Boston? Agree to uproot her life?”
Van shook his head, pointed his finger. “She chose you. Jessica will go anywhere with you. She's a newswoman. Living here beyond the frontier? The potential for unique stories? It's her bread and butter.”
Teven smiled. “Christian said much the same.”
“He's right.” Van shrugged. “That's how you and Jess’ met, writing her stories about the Crimea.” He paused, waving his hand around. “Reporting the stories of the good fight. Cossacks against our fine Royal Navy boys. The Golden Fox taken, our gunship overrun. We brash lads taking command, driving the battle to the Krasnodar Cossacks. Storming the Russian batteries, fighting life and limb…” He grew silent, the supernatural horrors the Krasnodar unleashed during the Sea of Azov campaign of the Crimean War forever etched into their minds.
Van breathed in and exhaled. “The old smith in Red Clay talked about war, and how the end of every war creates three armies. An army of the wounded, an army of the bereaved, and an army of thieves.”
Teven nodded and smiled as he raised his finger. “He forgot one, the fourth army. An army of newborns, and hope for the future.”
Van shook his head. Teven, ever an optimist.
*
The thick dust from the rear of the herd all but obscured the twilight skies to the east. The bedding down for the night coming soon enough, where Day Long left Nathan and the chuck.
The heat of the massed herd radiated upon Day Long’s drag riders at the rear, western edge, of the cattle.
Day Long and the rear vaqueros ensured no cattle strayed and no one followed the herd. While point, swing, and flank riders fulfilled similar duties around the longhorns, all wary of the beasts they led and protected.
Slowing his grulla, he turned to rustle through his saddlebags, and saw it, a flicker of movement on the expense of sparse grasslands behind. Through the thinning dust cloud and setting sun beyond. The grulla trotted on and Day Long lowered his wide, flat-brimmed, sombrero. There it was again, quick and low to the ground. Nothing but sagebrush provided any sort of cover. He turned the grulla to the right. A coyote maybe? Likely. The grulla stopped at a pull on the reins. Day Long lifted his canteen, pulled his bandana away from his face and drank deep. The sun grew fat against the mountains to the west. The land remained still, but something lurked out there.
Advertisement
- In Serial46 Chapters
Prehistoric Barbarian
The future became a peaceful utopia in the Core Regions. No crime, no wars, no conflicts, even rude behavior is rare. People became complacent and lazy. The main character isn’t a hero or a typical protagonist. Calling him an… opportunist would be the least offensive probably. In this age, he’s sticking out like a sore thumb. Who would notice a few shady happenings when crime is a foreign concept and there is nobody to catch you? *Book 1 - Done.*
8 198 - In Serial42 Chapters
The FPD (Fart Police Department)
The FPD (Fart Police Department) The world’s norms and ethics have drastically shifted for the worse after an uncontrollable flatus outbreak absorbed the world’s inhabitant, causing major depopulation on a global scale. Conversely, to remedy the spread of this vulgar contagion, the Societal Gods who were partially indirectly responsible for causing the outbreak, implemented certain strict measures for the servile humans to follow. These strict policies were commonly known to the general public as Fart Commandments. Thou shall not relieve themselves in public without following the proper guided measures; thou shall not relieve themselves in private without adhering to the strict guidelines; each new-born and younglings should be taken to the nearest medical facility regularly for inoculation; loose bottoms shall not be tolerated at any governing venues and face-masks should always be worn appropriately. Failure to adhere to the above commandments would result in a mandatory life sentence without a court appeal or probation unless they are of influential births and have authoritative backers. In this twisted society which had been established today a model young female who adhered to the strict policies all of her life without questioning, accidentally broke one of the Fart Commandments and found herself entangled with a rebellious group of uncouth individuals who opposed the Societal Gods. To regain her innocence and social standing among the civil society, this young lady dared challenge the Societal God’s ruling by utilizing the absolute thing that they detested the most which were the destructive vapours of her flatus. Certainly, she will suffer the excruciating consequences of defying her lords’ commandments. (Link to Discord) https://discord.gg/XqY4JAfhcd (Author’s Notes)You can offer your support for Mia Aim’s creativity if you visit the following links below. I’m currently in the process of working on my new LitRPG-Fantasy novel, Word Fu! The latest chapters are published on Patreon along with character artwork. Please offer your support. https://www.patreon.com/MiaAim_Creative_Force https://ko-fi.com/miaaim https://www.amazon.com/author/miaaim https://www.amazon.com/author/manga-god
8 218 - In Serial17 Chapters
OWO || kny x bnha
"いやだからダメて""あー無理だね"In which a UA student gets thrown into her favourite anime- kny- but then proceeds to almost die several times."もう疲れたわ"[Warning: Swearing, gore and more mature themes]originally named SUN
8 224 - In Serial22 Chapters
The Lost Archon
One early spring afternoon, sixteen-year-old Reid is going for a walk when he finds a magical occurrence taking him to another world. A world where he is considered an impossible mage - and where he becomes ridiculously powerful quickly. Though he's happy for the adventures he can go on and the friends he makes, Reid also wants to find out how he got there and why, and if there's a way to return home to his parents. Reid's priorities in this new world are learning magic, going on a few adventures, dealing with his feelings for the cute wolfkin Terrence Windfang, and seek an audience with the gods. All but one of them, he finds, is significantly easier than he expected. This is a participant in the [April 2022 Royal Road Writathon Challenge]. The story is also concluded as of 4/26/2022. IMPORTANT NOTES: 1) This is a story about an OP guy doing OP guy things. There will be few fights that he struggles with, and he will rarely, if ever, find his life in peril. 2) This is a slice-of-life and adventure story, which means that there will be periods of chapters without any action or conflict, but also periods of chapters with battles and exploration/adventure. 3) There will be NO petty squabbles or conflicts going on in this story, because it is meant to be a fun one, not a high-tension, drama-filled story. So it will NOT be that. If you want lots of action or lots of conflict, then find another story to read because this isn't it. 4) There will never be an overarching evil/villain/conflict to deal with in this story. Ever. 5) This story will not contain sexual content as it will end after Book 1. As such, Reid and his future boyfriend will never reach 18+ years of age in-story, so they will never have sex in the story. There will also be no harem in this story. 6) This is a part of the Royal Road April 2022 Writathon Challenge. 7) This story takes place in its own story universe, with its own rules. Please keep that in mind when reading it and other stories.
8 197 - In Serial11 Chapters
Interstellar World Struggle TV
Ever wondered how an apokalypse could happen in other countries beside the US ?Arn Tschiller, a student of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, makes a tourist cruising drive at the north sea. Suddenly, a big explosion illuminates the horizon, and the ship braces for its impact of the airstruggle. As the effects go by, everybody on the ship gets a note :Welcome to Interstellar World Struggle TV....Author's note :Hello everybody, this is my first attempt to contribute to this site. As written above, I wanted to submit a fiction of an apokalypse in another country then the US. Don't misundertand me, I love this sort of stories, like Once a hero and Apocalyse now (2) , which are clearly also 2 of my role models.But nor the whole world circulates around the US, as also Insania online can show.So i would be delighted about comments, reviews and suggestions to this fiction.Thank you in AdvanceDARTHKECKS
8 104 - In Serial12 Chapters
JOURNEY
I want a father who scolds me when I did wrong. I want a mother who loves me unconditionally I want a brother or sister who plays with me. If there is another life, I just want a family. See, the journey of a boy who challenges god to seek what he wants. A tale you never heard off. A tale with joy and sadness of life.
8 167

