"
"They would if I were Nick," said the cowboy. Then he added quickly, as
if regretting his remark, "Our earmark is an under-bit right and a split
left, you said. Well, the Four-Bar-M earmark is a crop and an under-bit
right and a swallow-fork left." With the point of his iron now he again
marked in the dirt. "Here's your Cross-Triangle: [Illustration]; and
here's your Pour-Bar-M: [Illustration]."
"And if a calf branded with a Tailholt iron were to be found following a
Cross-Triangle cow, then what?" came Patches' very natural question.
"Then," returned the foreman of the Cross-Triangle grimly, "there would
be a mighty good chance for trouble."
"But it seems to me," said Patches, as they rode on, "that it would be
easily possible for a man to brand another man's calf by mistake."
"A man always makes a mistake when he puts his iron on another man's
property," returned the cowboy shortly.
"But might it not be done innocently, just the same!" persisted Patches.
"Yes, it might," admitted Phil.
"Well, then, what would you do if you found a calf, that you knew
belonged to the Dean, branded with some other man's brand? I mean, how
would you proceed?"
"Oh, I see what you are driving at," said Phil in quite a different
tone.
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