Tags:
adventure,
Mystery,
Texas,
dog,
cowdog,
Hank the Cowdog,
John R. Erickson,
John Erickson,
ranching,
Hank,
Drover,
Pete,
Sally May
there in front of everybody. Nobody ever seemed to get hurt in these brawls, and I guess they managed to solve their problems, but I could never get used to the noise of it.
And the hair. After one of them family fights, the air was full of fur. A guy could hardly breathe for the hair.
And then there was the kids. There must have been ten or twelve pups in the village, and let me tell you about coyote pups.
Now, a dog pup is kind of cute. Iâm not real fond of babies, understand, but even I have to admit that a little old cowdog pup is pretty cute. Heâll be fat as a butterball and covered with silky hair, and when he looks up at you with those big soft eyes, you canât help but smile and say, âHowâs it going, kid?â
Coyote pups ainât cute. They look mean, they sound mean, they act mean, and fellers, they are mean. Theyâve got two jaws full of teeth that are as sharp as needles, and their idea of good clean fun is to slip up behind some unsuspecting somebody (me, for instance) and just bite the heck out of his tail.
As a rule, Iâm a pretty good sport. I was a kid once myself and I got into my share of mischief, but I canât get used to people biting my tail. I mean, thereâs something kind of special and private about a guyâs tail. If heâs got any pride at all, he tries to keep it nice, and heâs a little fussy about scabs and bald spots and tooth marks and slobber and all that stuff.
What Iâm saying is that my tail ainât a play toy.
But these kids, theyâd sneak up behind me and sink their little needle teeth into my tail. First few times, I just growled at âem: âHere! Yâall go on, get out of here!â Didnât work. Coyotes are a little slow about taking a hint.
They came back and did it again, so I took sterner measuresâcuffed one of âem. Know what he did then? He bit me on the paw. Well, I wasnât going to take that off a dern kid, so I bit him on the scruff of the neck, and he somehow worked his way around and got hold of my left ear.
That got me all inflamed, donât you see, and I put the boy on the ground and was spanking some manners into him when his momma walked up.
â You brute , leave my junior alone!â
âHuh?â
I looked around just in time to get slapped across the mouth. âThere, bully!â
I suppose I shouldnât have slapped her back. But I did. Whop , right across the nose. âMaybe you can teach that boy some manners.â
Whop! âChicken dog!â
Whop! âWild hag!â
She burst into tears and went bawling to her husband saying I was just an animal and had beat up her danged kid and called her a wild hag. Turned out she was Scraunchâs woman, and here he came, all humped up and hair raised and yellow eyes aflaming.
I had taken about all I wanted off Scraunch and his family, and I was ready to go into combat, but Missy and her father jumped in between us and averted a civil war.
But the incident didnât do much to improve relations between me and Missyâs brother. I had a feeling that sooner or later we were going to have a showdown.
Funny thing about all this. Them coyotes didnât mind chewing on each other. I mean, they were fighting all the time. But when I tried it, they didnât like it. Made me think that no matter how long I stayed there, they would always think of me as an outsider.
Anyway, I was sitting on the ledge, off to myÂself and away from the noise, when Missy came up behind me. She nuzzled me with her nose and ran her claws down my backbone. She knew I liked that.
âSomething wrong? Hunk look sad.â
âOh, itâs nothing. Just wanted to be alone, I guess.â
âNot enjoy other coyote?â
âWell . . . do you ever get tired of all the noise, all that fighting and yelling?â
She shook her head. âThat happy sound. When coyote happy, make bunch noise.