In truth, Lize had risen that
morning intending “to whirl in and clean up
the house,” being suddenly conscious to some
degree of the dirt and disorder around her, but she
found herself physically unequal to the task.
Her brain seemed misted, and her food had been a source
of keen pain to her. Hence, after a few half-hearted
orders, she had settled into her broad chair behind
the counter and there remained, brooding over her
maternal responsibilities.
She gave sharp answers to all the
men who came up to ask after her daughter, and to
one who remarked on the girl’s good looks, and
demanded an introduction, she said: “Get
along! I’d as soon introduce her to a goat.
Now you fellers want to understand I’ll kill
the man that sets out to fool with my girl, I tell
you that!”
While yet Lee Virginia was wondering
how to begin the day’s work, some one knocked
on her door, and in answer to her invitation a woman
stepped in a thin blond hag with a weak
smile and watery blue eyes. “Is this little
Lee Virginy?” she asked.
The girl rose. “Yes.”
“Well, howdy!” She extended
her hand, and Lee took it. “My name’s
Jackson Mrs. Orlando Jackson. I knew
yore pa and you before ‘the war.’”
Lee Virginia dimly recalled such a
family, and asked: “Where do you live?”
“We hole up down here on a ranch
about twenty miles stayed with yore ma
last night thought I’d jest nacherly
look in and say howdy. Are ye back fer to
stay?”
“No, I don’t think so. Will you sit
down?”
Mrs. Jackson took a seat. “Come
back to see how yore ma was, I reckon? Found
her pretty porely, didn’t ye?” She lowered
her voice. “I think she’s got cancer
of the stummick now that’s my guess.”
Virginia started. “What makes you think
so?”
“Well, I knew a woman who went
just that way. Had that same flabby, funny look and
that same distress after eatin’, I told her this
mornin’ she’d better go up to Sulphur
and see that new doctor. You see, yore ma has
always been a reckless kind of a critter more
like a man than a woman, God knows an’
how she ever got a girl like you I don’t fairly
understand. I reckon you must be what the breedin’
men call ‘a throw-back,’ for yore pa wa’n’t
much to brag of, ‘ceptin’ for looks he
certainly was good-lookin’. He used to
sober down when he got where you was; but my good
God! weren’t they a pair to draw to?
I’ve heard ’Lando tell tales of yore ma’s
doin’s that would ’fright ye. Not
that she fooled with men,” she hastened to say.
“Lord, no! For her the sun rose and set
in Ed Wetherford. She’d leave you any day,
and go on the round-up with him. It nigh about
broke her up in business when Ed hit the far-away trail.”
The girl perceived that in her visitor
she had one of these self-oiled human talking-machines
“with tongue hung in the middle,” as the
old saying goes, and she was dimly conscious of having
heard her many times before. “You don’t
look very well yourself,” she said.
“Me? Oh, I’m like
one o’ these Injun dawgs can’t
kill me. I’ve been on the range so long
I’m tough as dried beef. It’s a fierce
old place for a woman or it was before
‘the war’ since then it’s
kind o’ softened down a hair.”
“What do you mean by ’the war’?”
“Why, you remember the rustler
war? We date everything out here from that year.
You was here, for I saw ye a slob of a child.”
“Oh!” exclaimed Virginia.
“I understand now. Yes, I was here.
I saw my father at the head of the cowboys.”
“They weren’t cowboys;
they were hired killers from Texas. That’s
what let yore pa out o’ the State. He were
on the wrong side, and if it hadn’t ‘a’
been for the regular soldiers he’d ‘a’
been wiped out right hyer. As it was he had to
skip the range, and hain’t never been back.
I don’t s’pose folks will lay it up agin
you bein’ a girl but they
couldn’t no son of Ed Wetherford come
back here and settle, not for a minute. Why, yore
ma has had to bluff the whole county a’most not
that I lay anything up agin her. I tell
folks she was that bewitched with Ed she couldn’t
see things any way but his way. She fought to
save his ranch and stawk and but hell!
she couldn’t do nothin’ and
then to have him go back on her the way he did slip
out ’twixt two days, and never write; that just
about shot her to pieces. I never could understand
that in Ed, he ’peared so mortally fond of you
and of her, too. He sure was fond of you!”
She shook her head. “No, can’t anybody
make me believe Ed Wetherford is alive.”
Lee Virginia started. “Who says he’s
alive?”
“Now don’t get excited,
girl. He ain’t alive; but yet folks say
we don’t know he’s dead. He
jest dropped out so far as yore ma is concerned, and
so far as the county is concerned; but some thought
you was with him in the East.”
The girl was now aware that her visitor
was hoping to gain some further information, and so
curtly answered: “I’ve never seen
my father since that night the soldiers came and took
him away to the fort. And my mother told me he
died down in Texas.”
Mrs. Jackson seemed a little disappointed,
but she smoothed the dress over her sharp knees, and
continued: “Right there the good old days
ended for yore ma and for us. The
cattle business has been steadily on the chute that
is, the free-range business. I saw it comin’,
an’ I says to Jackson, ‘Camp on some river-bottom
and chuck in the alfalfy,’ I says. An’
that’s what we did. We got a little bunch
o’ cattle up in the park Uncle Sam’s
man is lookin’ after ’em.” She
grinned. “Jackson kicked at the fee, but
I says: ’Twenty cents a head is cheap pasture.
We’re lucky to get any grass at all, now that
everybody’s goin’ in for sheep. ’Pears
like the sheepmen air gettin’ bolder and bolder
in this free-range graft, and I’m a-bettin’
on trouble.’” She rose. “Well,
I’m glad to ’ve had a word with ye;
but you hear me: yore ma has got to have doctor’s
help, or she’s a-goin’ to fall down some
day soon.”
Every word the woman uttered, every
tone of her drawling voice, put Lee Virginia back
into the past. She heard again the swift gallop
of hooves, saw once more the long line of armed ranchers,
and felt the hush of fear that lay over the little
town on that fateful day. The situation became
clearer in her mind. She recalled vividly the
words of astonishment and hate with which the women
had greeted her mother on the morning when the news
came that Edward Wetherford was among the invading
cattle-barons was, indeed, one of the leaders.
In Philadelphia the Rocky Mountain
States were synonyms of picturesque lawlessness, the
theatre of reckless romance, and Virginia Wetherford,
loyal daughter of the West, had defended it; but in
the coarse phrase of this lean rancheress was pictured
a land of border warfare as ruthless as that which
marked the Scotland of Rob Roy.
Commonplace as the little town looked
at the moment, it had been the scene of many a desperate
encounter, as the girl herself could testify, for she
had seen more than one man killed therein. Some
way the hideousness of these scenes had never shown
itself to her perhaps because she had been
a child at the time, and had thrilled to the delicious
excitement of it; but now, as she imagined it all
happening again before her eyes, she shivered with
horror. How monstrous, how impossible those killings
now seemed!
Then her mind came back to her mother’s
ailment. Eliza Wetherford had never been one
to complain, and her groans meant real suffering.
Her mind resolved upon one thing.
“She must see a doctor,” she decided.
And with this in mind she reentered the cafe, where
Lize was again in violent altercation with a waitress.
“Mother,” called Lee, “I want to
see you.”
With a parting volley of vituperation,
Mrs. Wetherford followed her daughter back into the
lodging-house.
“Mother,” the girl began,
facing her and speaking firmly, “you must go
to Sulphur City and see a doctor. I’ll
stay here and look after the business.”
Mrs. Wetherford perceived in her daughter’s
attitude and voice something decisive and powerful.
She sank into a chair, and regarded her with intent
gaze. “Hett Jackson’s been gabblin’
to you,” she declared. “Hett knows
more fool things that ain’t so than any old heffer
I know. She said I was about all in, didn’t
she? Prophesied I’d fall down and stay?
I know her.”
Lee Virginia remained firm. “I’m
not going by what she said, I’ve got eyes of
my own. You need help, and if the doctor here
can’t help you, you must go to Sulphur or to
Kansas City. I can run the boarding-house till
you get back.”
Eliza eyed her curiously. “Don’t
you go to countin’ on this ’chivalry of
the West’ which story-writers put into books.
These men out here will eat you up if you don’t
watch out. I wouldn’t dare to leave you
here alone. No, what I’ll do is sell the
place, if I can, and both of us get out.”
“But you need a doctor this minute.”
“I’ll be all right in
a little while; I’m always the worst for an hour
or two after I eat. This little squirt of a local
doctor gave me some dope to ease that pain, but I’ve
got my doubts I don’t want any morphine
habit in mine. No, daughter Virginny, it’s
mighty white of you to offer, but you don’t
know what you’re up against when you contract
to step into my shoes.”
Visions of reforming methods about
the house passed through the girl’s mind.
“There must be something I can do. Why don’t
you have the doctor come down here?”
“I might do that if I get any
worse, but I hate to have you stay in the house another
night. It’s only fit for these goats of
cowboys and women like Hett Jackson. Did the
bugs eat you last night?”
Virginia flushed. “Yes.”
Eliza’s face fell. “I
was afraid of that. You can’t keep ’em
out. The cowboys bring ’em in by the quart.”
“They can be destroyed and the flies,
too, can’t they?”
“When you’ve bucked flies
and bugs as long as I have, you’ll be less ’peart
about it. I don’t care a hoot in Hades till
somebody like you or Reddy or Ross comes along.
Most of the men that camp with me are like Injuns,
anyway they wouldn’t feel natural
without bugs a ticklin’ ’em. No,
child, you get ready and pull out on the Sulphur stage
to-morrow. I’ll pay your way back to Philadelphy.”
“I can’t leave you now,
mother. Now that I know you’re ill, I’m
going to stay and take care of you.”
Lize rose. “See here, girl,
don’t you go to idealizin’ me, neither.
I’m what the boys call an old battle-axe.
I’ve been through the whole war. I’m
able to feed myself and pay your board besides.
Just you find some decent boarding-place in Sulphur,
and I’ll see that you have ten dollars a week
to live on, just because you’re a Wetherford.”
“But I’m your daughter!”
Again Eliza fixed a musing look upon
her. “I reckon if the truth was known your
aunt Celia was nigher to being your mother than I ever
was. They always said you was all Wetherford,
and I reckon they were right. I always liked
men better than babies. So long as I had your
father, you didn’t count now that’s
the God’s truth. And I didn’t intend
that you should ever come back here. I urged
you to stay you know that.”
Lee Virginia imagined all this to
be a savage self-accusation which sprang from long
self-bereavement, and yet there was something terrifying
in its brutal frankness. She stood in silence
till her mother left the room, then went to her own
chamber with a painful knot in her throat. What
could she do with elemental savagery of this sort?
The knowledge that she must spend
another night in the bed led her to active measures
of reform. With disgustful desperation, she emptied
the room and swept it as with fire and sword.
Her change of mind, from the passive to the active
state, relieved and stimulated her, and she hurried
from one needed reform to another. She drew others
into the vortex. She inspired the chambermaid
to unwilling yet amazing effort, and the lodging-house
endured such a blast from the besom that it stood in
open-windowed astonishment uttering dust like the breath
of a dragon. Having swept and garnished the bed-chambers,
Virginia moved on the dining-room. As the ranger
had said, this, too, could be reformed.
Unheeding her mother’s protests,
she organized the giggling waiters into a warring
party, and advanced upon the flies. By hissing
and shooing, and the flutter of newspapers, they drove
the enemy before them, and a carpenter was called
in to mend screen doors and windows, thus preventing
their return. New shades were hung to darken the
room, and new table-cloths purchased to replace the
old ones, and the kitchen had such a cleaning as it
had not known before in five years.
In this work the time passed swiftly,
and when Redfield and Cavanagh came again to lunch
they exclaimed in astonishment as, indeed,
every one did.
“How’s this?” queried
Cavanagh, humorously. “Has the place ’changed
hands?’”
Lize was but grimly responsive. “Seem’s
like it has.”
“I hope the price has not gone up?”
“Not yet.”
Redfield asked: “Who’s responsible
for this your new daughter?”
“You’ve hit it. She’s
started right in to polish us all up to city standards.”
“We need it,” commented
Cavanagh, in admiration of the girl’s prompt
action. “This room is almost civilized,
still we’ll sort o’ miss the flies.”
Lize apologized. “Well,
you know a feller gits kind o’ run down like
a clock, and has to have some outsider wind him up
now and again. First I was mad, then I was scared,
but now I’m cheerin’ the girl on.
She can run the whole blame outfit if she’s
a mind to even if I go broke for it.
The work she got out o’ them slatter-heels of
girls is a God’s wonder.”
Ross looked round for Virginia, but
could not find her. She had seen him come in,
and was out in the kitchen doing what she could to
have his food brought in and properly served.
Redfield reassured the perturbed proprietor
of “the joint.” “No fear of
going broke, madam quite the contrary.
A few little touches like this, and you’ll be
obliged to tear down and build bigger. I don’t
believe I’d like to see your daughter run this
eating-house as a permanent job, but if she starts
in I’m sure she’ll make a success of it.”
Lee Virginia came in flushed and self-conscious,
but far lighter of spirit than at breakfast; and stood
beside the table while the waitress laid the
dishes before her guests with elaborate assumption
of grace and design. Hitherto she had bumped
them down with a slash of slangy comment. The
change was quite as wonderful as the absence of the
flies.
“Do we owe these happy reforms
to you?” asked Cavanagh, admiring Virginia’s
neat dress and glowing cheeks.
“Partly,” she answered.
“I was desperate. I had to do something,
so I took to ordering people around.”
“I understand,” he said.
“Won’t you sit at our table again?”
“Please do,” said Redfield. “I
want to talk with you.”
She took a seat a little
hesitantly. “You see, I studied Domestic
Science at school, and I’ve never had a chance
to apply it before.”
“Here’s your opportunity,”
Redfield assured her. “My respect for the
science of domestics is growing I marvel
to think what another week will bring forth.
I think I’ll have to come down again just to
observe the improvement in the place.”
“It can’t last,”
Lize interjected. “She’ll catch the
Western habits she’ll sag, same as
we all do.”
“No she won’t,”
declared Ross, with intent to encourage her. “If
you give her a free hand, I predict she’ll make
your place the wonder and boast of the county-side.”
“When do you go back to the
mountains?” Lee Virginia asked, a little later.
“Immediately after my luncheon,” he replied.
She experienced a pang of regret,
and could not help showing it a little. “Your
talk helped me,” she said; “I’ve
decided to stay, and be of use to my mother.”
Redfield overheard this, and turned toward her.
“This is a rough school for
you, Lee Virginia, and I should dislike seeing you
settle down to it for life: but it can’t
hurt you if you are what I think you are. Nothing
can soil or mar the mind that wills for good.
I want Mrs. Redfield to know you; I’m sure her
advice will be helpful. I hope you’ll come
up and see us if you decide to settle in Sulphur or
if you don’t.”
“I should like to do so,”
she said, touched by the tone as well as by the words
of his invitation.
“Redfield’s house is one
of the few completely civilized homes in the State,”
put in Cavanagh. “When I get so weary of
cuss-words and poaching and graft that I can’t
live without killing some one, I go down to Elk Lodge
and smoke and read the Supervisor’s London and
Paris weeklies and recover my tone.”
Redfield smiled. “When
I get weak-kneed or careless in the service and feel
my self-respect slipping away, I go up to Ross’s
cabin and talk with a man who represents the impersonal,
even-handed justice of the Federal law.”
Cavanagh laughed. “There!
Having handed each other reciprocal bouquets, we can
now tell Miss Wetherford the truth. Each of us
thinks very well of himself, and we’re both
believers in the New West.”
“What do you mean by the New West?” asked
the girl.
“Well, the work you’ve
been doing here this morning is a part of it,”
answered Redfield. “It’s a kind of
housecleaning. The Old West was picturesque and,
in a way, manly and fine certain phases
of it were heroic and I hate to see it
all pass, but some of us began to realize that it
was not all poetry. The plain truth is my companions
for over twenty years were lawless ruffians, and the
cattle business as we practiced it in those days was
founded on selfishness and defended at the mouth of
the pistol. We were all pensioners on Uncle Sam,
and fighting to keep the other fellow off from having
a share of his bounty. It was all wasteful, half-savage.
We didn’t want settlement, we didn’t want
law, we didn’t want a State. We wanted
free range. We were a line of pirates from beginning
to end, and we’re not wholly, reformed yet.”
He was talking to the whole table
now, for all were listening. No other man on
the range could say these things with the same authority,
for Hugh Redfield was known all over the State as
a man who had been one of the best riders and ropers
in his outfit one who had started in as
a common hand at herding, and who had been entirely
through “the war.”
Lee Virginia listened with a stirring
of the blood. Her recollections of the range
were all of the heroic. She recalled the few times
when she was permitted to go on the round-up, and
to witness the breaking of new horses, and the swiftness,
grace, and reckless bravery of the riders, the moan
and surge of herds, the sweep of horsemen, came back
and filled her mind with large and free and splendid
pictures. And now it was passing or
past!
Some one at the table accused Redfield
of being more of a town-site boomer than a cattle-man.
He was quite unmoved by this charge.
“The town-site boomer at least believes in progress.
He does not go so far as to shut out settlement.
If a neat and tidy village or a well-ordered farmstead
is not considered superior to a cattle-ranch littered
with bones and tin cans, or better than even a cow-town
whose main industry is whiskey-selling, then all civilized
progress is a delusion. When I was a youngster
these considerations didn’t trouble me.
I liked the cowboy life and the careless method of
the plains, but I’ve some girls growing up now,
and I begin to see the whole business in a new light.
I don’t care to have my children live the life
I’ve lived. Besides, what right have we
to stand in the way of a community’s growth?
Suppose the new life is less picturesque than
the old? We don’t like to leave behind us
the pleasures and sports of boyhood; but we grow up,
nevertheless. I’m far more loyal to the
State as Forest Supervisor than I was when I was riding
with the cattle-men to scare up the nester.”
He uttered all this quite calmly,
but his ease of manner, his absolute disregard of
consequences, joined with his wealth and culture, gave
his words great weight and power. No one was
ready with an answer but Lize, who called out, with
mocking accent: “Reddy, you’re too
good for the Forest Service, you’d ought ’o
be our next Governor.”
This was a centre shot. Redfield
flushed, and Cavanagh laughed. “Mr. Supervisor,
you are discovered!”
Redfield recovered himself. “I
should like to be Governor of this State for about
four years, but I’m likelier to be lynched for
being in command of twenty ‘Cossacks.’”
At this moment Sam Gregg entered the
room, followed by a young man in an English riding-suit.
Seeing that “the star-boarder table” offered
a couple of seats, they pointed that way. Sam
was plainly in war-like frame of mind, and slammed
his sombrero on its nail with the action of a man
beating an adversary.
“That is Sam Gregg and his son
Joe used to be ranch cattle-man, now one
of our biggest sheepmen,” Cavanagh explained.
“He’s bucking the cattle-men now.”
Lee Virginia studied young Gregg with
interest, for his dress was that of a man to whom
money came easy, and his face was handsome, though
rather fat and sullen. In truth, he had been
brought into the room by his father to see “Lize
Wetherford’s girl,” and his eyes at once
sought and found her. A look of surprise and
pleasure at once lit his face.
Gregg was sullen because of his interview
with Cavanagh, which had been in the nature of a grapple;
and in the light of what Redfield had said, Lee Virginia
was able to perceive in these two men a struggle for
supremacy. Gregg was the greedy West checked
and restrained by the law.
Every man in the room knew that Gregg
was a bitter opponent of the Forest Service, and that
he “had it in” for the ranger; and some
of them knew that he was throwing more sheep into
the forest than his permits allowed, and that a clash
with Redfield was sure to come. It was just like
the burly old Irishman to go straight to the table
where his adversary sat.
Virginia’s eyes fell before
the gaze of these two men, for they had none of the
shyness or nothing of the indirection of the ruder
men she had met. They expressed something which
angered her, though she could not have told precisely
why.
Redfield did not soften his words
on Gregg’s account; on the contrary he made
them still more cutting and to the line.
“The mere fact that I live near
the open range or a national forest does not give
me any rights in the range or forest,”
he was saying, as Gregg took his seat. “I
enjoy the privilege of these Government grazing
grounds, and I ought to be perfectly willing to pay
the fee. These forests are the property of the
whole nation; they are public lands, and should yield
a revenue to the whole nation. It is silly to
expect the Government to go on enriching a few of
us stockmen at the expense of others. I see this,
and I accept the change.”
“After you’ve got rich at it,” said
Gregg.
“Well, haven’t you?”
retorted Redfield. “Are you so greedy that
nothing will stop you?”
Lize threw in a wise word. “The
sporting-houses of Kansas City and Chicago keep old
Sam poor.”
A roar of laughter followed this remark,
and Gregg was stumped for a moment; but the son grinned
appreciatively. “Now be good!”
Cavanagh turned to Virginia in haste
to shield her from all that lay behind and beneath
this sally of the older and deeply experienced woman.
“The Supervisor is willing to yield a point he
knows what the New West will bring.”
Gregg growled out: “I’m
not letting any of my rights slip.”
The girl was troubled by the war-light
which she saw in the faces of the men about her, and
vague memories of the words and stories she had overchanced
to hear in her childhood came back to her mind hints
of the drunken orgies of the cowboys who went to the
city with cattle, and the terrifying suggestion of
their attitude toward all womankind. She set
Cavanagh and his chief quite apart from all the others
in the room, and at first felt that in young Gregg
was another man of education and right living but
in this she was misled.
Lize had confidence enough in the
ranger to throw in another malicious word. “Ross,
old Bullfrog came down here to chase you up a tree so
he said. Did he do it?”
Gregg looked ugly. “I’m not done
with this business.”
She turned to Ross. “Don’t
let him scare you his beller is a whole
lot worse than his bite.”
This provoked another laugh, and Gregg
was furious all the more so that his son
joined in. “I’ll have your head, Mr.
Supervisor; I’ll carry my fight to the Secretary.”
“Very well,” returned
Redfield, “carry it to the President if you wish.
I simply repeat that your sheep must correspond to
your permit, and if you don’t send up and remove
the extra number I will do it myself. I don’t
make the rules of the department. My job is to
carry them out.”
By this time every person in the room
was tense with interest. They all knew Gregg
and his imperious methods. He was famous for saying
once (when in his cup): “I always thought
sheepmen were blankety blank sons of guns, and now
I’m one of ’em I know they are.”
Some of the cattle-men in the room had suffered from
his greed, and while they were not partisans of the
Supervisor they were glad to see him face his opponent
fearlessly.
Lize delivered a parting blow.
“Bullfrog, you and me are old-timers. We’re
on the losing side. We belong to the ‘good
old days’ when the Fork was ’a man’s
town,’ and to be ‘shot up’ once a
week kept us in news. But them times are past.
You can’t run the range that way any more.
Why, man, you’ll have to buy and fence your
own pasture in a few years more, or else pay rent
same as I do. You stockmen kick like steers over
paying a few old cents a head for five months’
range; you’ll be mighty glad to pay a dollar
one o’ these days. Take your medicine that’s
my advice.” And she went back to her cash-drawer.
Redfield’s voice was cuttingly
contemptuous as he said quite calmly: “You’re
all kinds of asses, you sheepmen. You ought to
pay the fee for your cattle with secret joy.
So long as you can get your stock pastured (and in
effect guarded) by the Government from June to November
for twenty cents, or even fifty cents, per head you’re
in luck. Mrs. Wetherford is right: we’ve
all been educated in a bad school. Uncle Sam has
been too bloomin’ lazy to keep any supervision
over his public lands. He’s permitted us
grass pirates to fight and lynch and burn one another
on the high range (to which neither of us had any
right), holding back the real user of the land the
farmer. We’ve played the part of selfish
and greedy gluttons so long that we fancy our privileges
have turned into rights. Having grown rich on
free range, you’re now fighting the Forest Service
because it is disposed to make you pay for what has
been a gratuity. I’m a hog, Gregg, but
I’m not a fool. I see the course of empire,
and I’m getting into line.”
Gregg was silenced, but not convinced.
“It’s a long lane that has no turn,”
he growled.
Redfield resumed, in impersonal heat.
“The cow-man was conceived in anarchy and educated
in murder. Whatever romantic notions I may have
had of the plains twenty-five years ago, they are
lost to me now. The free-range stock-owner has
no country and no God; nothing but a range that isn’t
his, and damned bad manners begging pardon,
Miss Wetherford. The sooner he dies the better
for the State. He’s a dirty, wasteful sloven,
content to eat canned beans and drink canned milk in
his rotten bad coffee; and nobody but an old crank
like myself has the grace to stand up and tell the
truth about him.”
Cavanagh smiled. “And you
wouldn’t, if you weren’t a man of independent
means, and known to be one of the most experienced
cow-punchers in the county. I’ve no fight
with men like Gregg; all is they’ve got to conform
to the rules of the service.”
Gregg burst out: “You think
you’re the whole United States army! Who
gives you all the authority?”
“Congress and the President.”
“There’s nothing in that bill to warrant
these petty tyrannies of yours.”
“What you call tyrannies
I call defending the public domain,” replied
Redfield. “If I had my way, I’d give
my rangers the power of the Canadian mounted police.
Is there any other State in this nation where the roping
of sheep-herders and the wholesale butchery of sheep
would be permitted? From the very first the public
lands of this State have been a refuge for the criminal a
lawless no-man’s land; but now, thanks to Roosevelt
and the Chief Forester, we at least have a force of
men on the spot to see that some semblance of law
and order is maintained. You fellows may protest
and run to Washington, and you may send your paid representatives
there, but you’re sure to lose. As free-range
monopolists you are cumberers of the earth, and all
you represent must pass, before this State can be
anything but the byword it now is. I didn’t
feel this so keenly ten years ago, but with a bunch
of children growing up my vision has grown clearer.
The picturesque West must give way to the civilized
West, and the war of sheepmen and cattle-men must
stop.”
The whole dining-room was still as
he finished, and Lee Virginia, with a girl’s
vague comprehension of the man’s world, apprehended
in Redfield’s speech a large and daring purpose.
Gregg sneered. “Perhaps
you intend to run for Congress on that line of talk.”
Redfield’s voice was placid.
“At any rate, I intend to represent the policy
that will change this State from the sparsely settled
battle-ground of a lot of mounted hobos to a State
with an honorable place among the other commonwealths.
If this be treason, make the most of it.”
Cavanagh was disturbed; for while
he felt the truth of his chief’s words, he was
in doubt as to the policy of uttering them.
It was evident to Virginia that the
cow-men, as well as Gregg, were nearly all against
the prophet of the future, and she was filled with
a sense of having arrived on the scene just as the
curtain to a stern and purposeful drama was being
raised. With her recollections of the savage days
of old, it seemed as if Redfield, by his bold words,
had placed his life in danger.
Cavanagh rose. “I must be going,”
he said, with a smile.
Again the pang of loss touched her
heart. “When will you come again?”
she asked, in a low voice.
“It is hard to say. A ranger’s
place is in the forest. I am very seldom in town.
Just now the danger of fires is great, and I am very
uneasy. I may not be down again for a month.”
The table was empty now, and they
were standing in comparative isolation looking into
each other’s eyes in silence. At last she
murmured: “You’ve helped me.
I’m going to stay a little while,
anyway, and do what I can ”
“I’m sorry I can’t
be of actual service, but I am a soldier with a work
to do. Even if I were here, I could not help
you as regards the townspeople they all
hate me quite cordially; but Redfield, and especially
Mrs. Redfield, can be of greater aid and comfort.
He’s quite often here, and when you are lonely
and discouraged let him take you up to Elk Lodge.”
“I’ve been working all
the morning to make this room decent. It was rather
fun. Don’t you think it helped?”
“I saw the mark of your hand
the moment I entered the door,” he earnestly
replied. “I’m not one that laughs
at the small field of woman’s work. If
you make this little hotel clean and homelike, you’ll
be doing a very considerable work in bringing about
the New West which the Supervisor is spouting about.”
He extended his hand, and as she took it he thrilled
to the soft strength of it. “Till next
time,” he said, “good luck!”
She watched him go with a feeling
of pain as if in his going she were losing
her best friend and most valiant protector.