[When A Man’s A Man by Harold Bell Wright]@TWC D-Link bookWhen A Man’s A Man CHAPTER VIII 8/32
"We'll get that fellow now, because before the next rodeo he'll be big enough to leave his mother, and then; if he isn't branded, he'll be a maverick, and will belong to anybody that puts an iron on him." "But couldn't someone brand him now, with their brand, and drive him away from his mother ?" asked Patches. "Such things have been known to happen, and that not a thousand miles from here, either," returned Phil dryly.
"But, really, you know, Mr. Patches, it isn't done among the best people." Patches laughed aloud at his companion's attempt at a simpering affectation.
Then he watched with admiration while the cowboy sent his horse after the calf and, too quickly for an inexperienced eye to see just how it was done, the deft riata stretched the animal by the heels. With a short "hogging" rope, which he carried looped through a hole cut in the edge of his chaps near the belt, Phil tied the feet of his victim, before the animal had recovered from the shock of the fall; and then, with Patches helping, proceeded to build a small fire of dry grass and leaves and sticks from a near-by bush.
From his saddle, Phil took a small iron rod, flattened at one end, and only long enough to permit its being held in the gloved hand when the flattened end was hot--a running iron, he called it, and explained to his interested pupil, as he thrust it into the fire, how some of the boys used an iron ring for range branding. "And is there no way to change or erase a brand ?" asked Patches, while the iron was heating. "Sure there is," replied Phil.
And sitting on his heels, cowboy fashion, he marked on the ground with a stick. "Look! This is the Cross-Triangle brand: [Illustration]; and this: [Illustration], the Four-Bar-M, happens to be Nick Cambert's iron, over at Tailholt Mountain.
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