After a hot and tedious journey, George
and his companion alighted one afternoon at a little
station on a branch line, and Edgar looked about with
interest when the train went on again. A telegraph
office with a baggage-room attached occupied the middle
of the low platform, a tall water-tank stood at the
end, and three grain elevators towered high above
a neighboring side-track. Facing the track, stood
a row of wooden buildings varying in size and style:
they included a double-storied hotel with a veranda
in front of it, and several untidy shacks. Running
back from them, two short streets, thinly lined with
small houses, led to a sea of grass.
“Sage Butte doesn’t strike
one as a very exhilarating place,” George remarked.
“We’ll stroll round it, and then see about
rooms, since we have to stay the night.”
They left the station, but the main
street had few attractions to offer. Three stores,
with strangely-assorted, dusty goods in their windows
fronted the rickety plankwalk; beyond these stood a
livery stable, a Chinese laundry, and a few dwelling-houses.
Several dilapidated wagons and buggies were scattered
about the uneven road. In the side street, disorderly
rows of agricultural implements surrounded a store,
and here and there little board dwellings with wire
mosquito-doors and net-guarded windows, stood among
low trees. Farther back were four very small
wooden churches. It was unpleasantly hot, though
a fresh breeze blew clouds of dust through the place.
“I’ve seen enough,”
said Edgar. “The Butte isn’t pretty;
we’ll assume it’s prosperous, though I
haven’t noticed much sign of activity yet.
Let’s go to the hotel.”
When they reached it, several untidy
loungers sat half asleep in the shade of the veranda,
and though they obstructed the approach to the entrance
none of them moved. Passing behind them, George
opened a door filled in with wire-mesh, and they entered
a hot room with a bare floor, furnished with a row
of plain wooden chairs. After they had rung
a bell for several minutes, a man appeared and looked
at them with languid interest from behind a short
counter.
“Can you put us up?” George inquired.
“Sure,” was the answer.
The man flung down a labeled key,
twisted round his register, which was fitted in a
swivel frame, and handed George a pen.
“We want two rooms,” Edgar objected.
“Can’t help that. We’ve only
got one.”
“I suppose we’d better take it.
Where can one get a drink?”
“Bar,” replied the other, indicating a
gap in a neighboring partition.
“They’re laconic in this country,”
Edgar remarked.
“Ever since I arrived in it,
I’ve felt as if I were a mere piece of baggage,
to be hustled along anyway without my wishes counting.”
“You’ll get used to it after a while,”
George consoled him.
Entering the dark bar, Edgar refreshed
himself with several ice-cooled drinks, served in
what he thought were unusually small glasses.
He felt somewhat astonished when he paid for them.
“Thirst’s expensive on the prairie,”
he commented.
“Pump outside,” drawled the attendant.
“It’s rather mean water.”
They went upstairs to a very scantily
furnished, doubled-bedded room. George, warned
by previous experience, glanced around.
“There’s soap and a towel,
anyway; but I don’t see any water,” he
remarked. “I’ll take the jar; they’ll
have a rain-tank somewhere about.”
Edgar did not answer him. He
was looking out of the open window, and now that there
was little to obstruct his view, the prospect interested
him. It had been a wet spring, and round the
vast half-circle he commanded the prairie ran back
to the horizon, brightly green, until its strong coloring
gave place in the distance to soft neutral tones.
It was blotched with crimson flowers; in the marshy
spots there were streaks of purple; broad squares
of darker wheat checkered the sweep of grass, and
dwarf woods straggled across it in broken lines.
In one place was the gleam of a little lake.
Over it all there hung a sky of dazzling blue, across
which great rounded cloud-masses rolled.
Edgar looked around as George came in with the water.
“That’s great!”
he exclaimed, indicating the prairie; and then, turning
toward the wooden town, he added: “What
a frightful mess man can make of pretty things!
Still, I’ve no doubt the people who built the
Butte are proud of it.”
“If you talk to them in that
style, you’ll soon discover their opinion,”
George laughed; “but I don’t think it would
be wise.”
Soon afterward a bell rang for supper,
and going down to a big room, they found seats at
a table which had several other occupants. Two
of them, who appeared to be railroad-hands, were simply
dressed in trousers and slate-colored shirts, and
when they rested their elbows on the tablecloth, they
left grimy smears. George thought the third man
of the party, who was neatly attired, must be the station-agent;
the fourth was unmistakably a newly-arrived Englishman.
As soon as they were seated, a very smart young woman
came up and rattled off the names of various unfamiliar
dishes.
“I think I’ll have a steak;
I know what that is,” Edgar told her.
She withdrew, and presently surrounded
him with an array of little plates, at which he glanced
dubiously before he attacked the thin, hard steak
with a nickeled knife which failed to make a mark on
it. When he made a more determined effort, it
slid away from him, sweeping some greasy fried potatoes
off his plate, and he grew hot under the stern gaze
of the girl, who reappeared with some coffee he had
not ordered.
“Perhaps you had better take
it away before I do more damage, and let me have some
fish,” he said humbly.
“Another time you’ll say
what you want at first. You can’t prospect
right through the menu,” she rebuked him.
In the meanwhile George had been describing
his companions on the train to one of the men opposite.
“He told me he was located in
the district, but I didn’t learn his name, and
he didn’t get off here,” he explained.
“Do you know him?”
“Sure,” said the other.
“It’s Alan Grant, of Poplar, ’bout
eighteen miles back. Guess he went on to the
next station a little farther, but it’s
easier driving, now they’re dumping straw on
the trail.”
“Putting straw on the road?”
Edgar broke in. “Why are they doing that?”
“You’ll see, if you drive
out north,” the man answered shortly. Then
he turned to his better-dressed companion. “What
are you going to do with that carload of lumber we
got for Grant?”
“Send the car on to Benton.”
“She’s billed here.”
“Can’t help that the
road’s mistake. Grant ordered all his stuff
to Benton. What he says goes.”
This struck George as significant it
was only a man of importance whose instructions would
be treated with so much deference. Then the
agent turned to Edgar.
“What do you think of this country?”
“The country’s very nice.
So far as I’ve seen them, I can’t say
as much for the towns; they might be prettier.”
“Might be prettier?” exclaimed
the agent. “If they’re not good enough
for you, why did you come here?”
“I’m not sure it was a
very judicious move. But, you see, I didn’t
know what the place was like; and, after all, an experience
of this kind is supposed to be bracing.”
The agent ignored Edgar after this.
He talked to George, and elicited the information
that the latter meant to farm. Then he got up,
followed by two of the others, and the remaining man
with the English appearance turned to George diffidently.
“Do you happen to want a teamster?” he
asked.
“I believe I’ll want two,”
was the answer. “But I’m afraid I’ll
have to hire Canadians.”
The man’s face fell. He
looked anxious, and George remembered having seen
a careworn woman tearfully embracing him before their
steamer sailed. Her shabby clothes and despairing
face had roused George’s sympathy.
“Well,” said the man dejectedly,
“that’s for you to decide; but I’ve
driven horses most of my life, and until I get used
to things I’d be reasonable about the pay.
I was told these little places were the best to strike
a job in; but, so far as I can find out, there’s
not much chance here.”
George felt sorry for him. He suddenly made
up his mind.
“What are farm teamsters getting
now?” he asked a man who was leaving an adjacent
table.
“Thirty dollars a month,” was the answer.
“Thanks,” said George,
turning again to the Englishman. “Be ready
to start with us to-morrow. I’ll take
you at thirty dollars; but if I don’t get my
value out of you, we’ll have to part.”
“No fear of that, sir,”
replied the other, in a tone of keen satisfaction.
When they got outside, Edgar looked
at George with a smile.
“I’m glad you engaged
the fellow,” he said; “but considering
that you’ll have to teach him, were you not
a little rash?”
“I’ll find out by and
by.” George paused, and continued gravely:
“It’s a big adventure these people make.
Think of it the raising of the passage
money by some desperate economy, the woman left behind
with hardly enough to keep her a month or two, the
man’s fierce anxiety to find some work!
When I saw how he was watching me, I felt I had to
hire him.”
“Just so,” responded Edgar.
“I suppose I ought to warn you that doing things
of the kind may get you into trouble some day; but
cold-blooded prudence never did appeal to me.”
He took one of the chairs in front of the building
and filled his pipe before he continued: “We’ll
sit here a while, and then we might as well stroll
across the plain. The general-room doesn’t
strike me as an attractive place to spend the evening
in.”
An hour later they left the tall elevators
and straggling town behind, and after brushing through
a belt of crimson flowers, they followed the torn-up
black trail that led into the waste. After a
mile or two it broke into several divergent rows of
ruts, and they went on toward a winding line of bluff
across the short grass. Reaching that, they
pushed through the thin wood of dwarf birch and poplar,
skirting little pools from which mallard rose:
and then, crossing a long rise, they sat down to smoke
on its farther side. Sage Butte had disappeared,
the sun had dipped, and the air was growing wonderfully
fresh and cool. Here and there a house or barn
rose from the sweep of grass; but for the most part
it ran back into the distance lonely and empty.
It was steeped in strong, cold coloring, but on its
western rim there burned a vivid flush of rose and
saffron. Edgar was impressed by its vastness
and silence.
“This,” he said thoughtfully,
“makes up for a good deal. Once you get
clear of the railroad, it’s a captivating country.”
“Have you decided yet what you’re going
to do in it?”
“It’s too soon,”
Edgar rejoined. “The family idea was that
I should stay about twelve months, and then go back
and enter some profession. Ethel seems quite
convinced that a little roughing it will prove beneficial.
I might, however, stop out and try farming, which
is one reason why you can have my services for nothing
for a time. Considering what local wages are,
don’t you think you’re lucky?”
“That,” laughed George, “remains
to be seen.”
“Anyhow, there’s no doubt
that Sylvia Marston scores in securing you on the
same favorable terms. It has struck me that she’s
a woman who gets things easily.”
“She hasn’t always done
so. Can you imagine, for instance, what two
years on a prairie farm must have been to a delicate,
fastidious girl, brought up in luxury?”
“I’ve an idea that Sylvia
would manage to avoid a good many of the hardships.”
“Sylvia would never shirk a
duty,” George declared firmly.
Edgar refilled his pipe.
“I’ve been thinking about
Dick Marston,” he said. “After the
way he was generally regarded at home, it was strange
to hear that Canadian’s opinions; but I’ve
a notion that this country’s a pretty severe
touchstone. I mean that the sort of qualities
that make one popular in England may not prove of
much use here.”
“Dick lost his crop; that accounts
for a good deal,” George said shortly.
Edgar, knowing how staunch he was
to his friends, changed the subject; and when the
light grew dim they went back to the hotel. Breakfasting
soon after six the next morning, they took their places
in a light, four-wheeled vehicle, for which three
persons’ baggage made a rather heavy load, and
drove away with the hired man. The grass was
wet with dew, the air invigoratingly cool, and for
a time the fresh team carried them across the waste
at an excellent pace. When he had got used to
the frantic jolting, Edgar found the drive exhilarating.
Poplar bluffs, little ponds, a lake shining amid
tall sedges, belts of darkgreen wheat, went by; and
while the horses plunged through tall barley-grass
or hauled the vehicle over clods and ruts, the same
vast prospect stretched away ahead. It filled
the lad with a curious sense of freedom: there
was no limit to the prairies one could go
on and on, across still wider stretches beyond the
horizon.
By and by, however, they ran in among
low sandy hills, dotted with dwarf pines here and
there, and the pace slackened. The grass was
thin, the wheels sank in deep, loose sand, and the
sun was getting unpleasantly hot. For half an
hour they drove on; and then the team came to a standstill,
necked with spume, at the foot of a short, steep rise.
Edgar alighted and found the heat almost insupportable.
There was glaring sand all about him, and the breeze
which swept the prairie was cut off by the hill in
front.
“You’ll have to help the
team,” George told him, as he went to the horses’
heads.
Edgar and the hired man each seized
a wheel and endeavored to start the vehicle, while
the horses plunged in the slipping sand. They
made a few yards, with clouds of grit flying up about
them, and afterward came to a stop again. Next
they tried pushing; and after several rests they arrived,
breathless and gasping, at the crest of the rise.
There was a big hollow in front, and on the opposite
side a ridge which looked steeper than the last one.
“How much do you think there is of this?”
Edgar inquired.
“I can’t say,” George
answered. “I know of one belt that runs
for forty miles.”
Even walking downhill was laborious,
for they sank ankle-deep, but it was very much worse
when they faced the ascent. Short as the hill
was, it took them some time to climb; and, with the
hired man’s assistance, Edgar carried a heavy
trunk up the last part of it. Then he sat down.
“I’m not sure I can smoke,
but I intend to try,” he said. “If
you mean to rush the next hill right off, you will
go without me.” He turned to the hired
man. “What do you think of these roads,
Grierson?”
“I’ve seen better, sir,”
the other answered cautiously. “Perhaps
the hills don’t go on very far.”
Edgar ruefully glanced ahead at scattered
pines, clumps of brush, and ridges of gleaming sand.
“It’s my opinion there’s
no end to them! Hauling a load of wheat through
this kind of country must be a bit of an undertaking.”
After a short rest, they toiled for
an hour through the sand; and then rode slowly over
a road thickly strewn with straw, which bore the wheels.
It led them across lower ground to a strong wire fence,
where it forked: one branch skirting the barrier
along the edge of a muskeg, the other running through
the enclosed land. Deciding to take the latter,
George got down at the entrance, which was barred by
several strands of wire, firmly fastened.
“Half an hour’s work here,”
Edgar commented. “Driving’s rather
an arduous pastime in western Canada.”
They crossed a long field of barley,
a breadth of wheat, and passed an empty house; then
wound through a poplar wood until they reached the
grass again. It was long and rank, hiding the
ruts and hollows in the trail; but after stopping
a while for dinner in the shadow of a bluff, they
jolted on, and in the afternoon they reached a smoother
track. Crossing a low rise, they saw a wide stretch
of wheat beneath them, with a house and other buildings
near its margin.
“That,” said George, “is Sylvia’s
farm.”
Half an hour later, they drove through
the wheat, at which George glanced dubiously; and
then, traversing a belt of light sandy clods partly
grown with weeds, they drew up before the house.
It was double-storied, roomy, and neatly built of
wood; but it was in very bad repair, and the barn
and stables had a neglected and half-ruinous look.
Implements and wagons which had suffered from exposure
to the weather, stood about outside. Edgar noticed
that George’s face was grave.
“I am afraid we have our work
cut out,” he said. “We’ll put
up the team, and then look round the place and see
what needs doing first.”