The Almost Last Roundup. John R. Erickson
on>
The Almost Last Roundup
John R. Erickson
Illustrations by Gerald L. Holmes
Maverick Books, Inc.
Publication Information
MAVERICK BOOKS
Published by Maverick Books, Inc.
P.O. Box 549, Perryton, TX 79070
Phone: 806.435.7611
www.hankthecowdog.com
Published in the United States of America by Maverick Books, Inc., 2015
Copyright © John R. Erickson, 2015
All rights reserved
Maverick Books, Inc. Paperback ISBN: 978-1-59188-165-0
Hank the Cowdog® is a registered trademark of John R. Erickson.
Printed in the United States of America
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
Dedication
To my best students: Mark Erickson, Nathan Dahlstrom, and Nikki Georgacakis.
Contents
Chapter One Hard Times
Chapter Two Okie Dokie Doodle
Chapter Three The Charlies Capture Sally May
Chapter Four Alfred and I Help Slim
Chapter Five An Unscheduled Food Event
Chapter Six here Are No Teensie Weensie Temptations
Chapter Seven A Huge Moral Victory Over the Cat
Chapter Eight Fire!
Chapter Nine Gloom Falls Over the Ranch
Chapter Ten A Great Song
Chapter Eleven On the Long, Dusty Trail
Chapter Twelve A Change of Plans
Chapter One: Hard Times
It’s me again, Hank the Cowdog. On my ranch, we’d seen summers that were hot and summers that were dry, but we’d never seen anything like the kind of hot and dry we were going through in…whatever year it was.
We hadn’t gotten much snow over the winter months, and we missed the spring rains that usually come in April and May. Then came the summer heat. Bad. Awful. Not just one or two blistering days every week, but day after day of temperatures over a hundred degrees, and a constant life-sucking wind out of the southwest.
Our hay field produced about half the number of bales it should have. Ponds dried up. Wolf Creek shrank down to a trickle. Pastures turned into burned toast. Cow trails grew deeper and dustier.
Trees were starting to die, and we’re talking about native trees: hackberries, elms, cottonwoods, and even cedars. Fellers, when the cedars turn up their toes, you know you’re in a bad drought, because those old cedars are tougher than boot leather.
We had no wildflowers that year, no mosquitoes, and very few grasshoppers. Even the birds quit us. You know me, I’m no fan of noisy birds, but for crying out loud, when all the birds moved out…I hate to admit this, but the ranch seemed kind of lonely without them.
This would have been a great time for a dog to take a vacation and go visit some place that had penguins and icebergs, but the Security Division gets no vacations and no days off.
That’s where we were when the mystery began: roasted, toasted, hot, dehydrated, worn out, and wind-blown, and everybody on the ranch was on edge about prairie fires. See, when the pastures are bone dry and the wind is roaring, any little spark can start a blaze, and once it starts…I guess you’ll find out.
I don’t want to reveal too much, but…well, we had a fire. That comes later in the story, after I rescued Sally May from the Charlie Monsters and after Little Alfred had smuggled something out of his mother’s kitchen, but you’re not supposed to know about any of that stuff, so don’t tell anyone.
Sh-h-h-h-h.
Where were we? Oh yes, the drought.
The cowboys were sick of the heat and the dust, and disgusted that they were having to feed cattle in the summer. And boy, you talk about being in a foul mood! They weren’t fit to be around. When they weren’t complaining about the drought, they were snarling at each other, and when they got tired of that, they yelled at the dogs.
What were the dogs supposed to do about the drought? Actually, we tried a few home remedies. For three whole days in July, Drover and I stationed ourselves on a hill north of headquarters and barked at the clouds. They formed up into thunderheads, then fell apart and turned into fuzzy little do-nothing puffs that gave us about fifteen drops of rain.
Fifteen drops! We needed fifteen inches and we got fifteen drops. It was an outrage, a huge waste of time. If a cloud’s too lazy and dumb to make a rain, there’s nothing a dog can do about it.
When barking at the clouds didn’t produce any results, we tried singing our “Drought Song.” You’re probably not familiar with that one. Good. That means you’ve never been locked in a drought that was so bad, you tried to sing your way out of it.
I don’t suppose you’d want to hear it, would you? I mean, the subject matter is kind of depressing, but it’s not a bad little song. Pretty good, in fact. Yes, by George, you need to hear it. Stand by to roll tape.
Drought Song
Desiccated gramma grass, wilting on the ground.
Crisp yellow leaves are falling all around.
A west wind blows with cruel might,
And the prairie fires burn all through the night.
We need rain.
We need rain.
Not a cloud in the sky, in the pale blue sky.
If we don’t get a rain, everything is gonna die.
Dried up sage brush, looking mighty sad.
Chinaberry trees never saw it this bad.
Cottonwoods fade, showing barren limbs,
And the fish in the ponds are forgetting how to swim.
We need rain.
We need rain.
Not a cloud in the sky, in the pale blue sky.
If we don’t get a rain, everything is gonna die.
The grass is gone, the hay’s used up.
The cows look thin and they’re hunting grub.
The people are tired and filled with doubt,
And the dogs are sick of this stinking drought.
We need rain.
We need rain.
Not a cloud in the sky, in the pale blue sky.
If