On the evening that George left for
Brandon, Edgar drove over to the Grant homestead.
“It’s Saturday night,
my partner’s gone, and I felt I deserved a little
relaxation,” he explained.
“It’s something to be
able to feel that; the men who opened up this wheat-belt
never got nor wanted anything of the kind,” Grant
rejoined. “But as supper’s nearly
ready, you have come at the right time.”
Edgar turned to Flora.
“Your father always makes me
feel that I belong to a decadent age. One can
put up with it from him, because he’s willing
to live up to his ideas, which is not a universal
rule, so far as my experience of moralizers goes.
Anyhow, I’ll confess that I’m glad to
arrive in time for a meal. The cooking at our
place might be improved; George, I regret to say,
never seems to notice what he eats.”
“That’s a pretty good sign,” said
Grant.
“It strikes me as a failing
for which I have to bear part of the consequences.”
Flora laughed.
“If you felt that you had to
make an excuse for coming, couldn’t you have
made a more flattering one?”
“Ah!” said Edgar, “you
have caught me out. But I could give you a number
of better reasons. It isn’t my fault you
resent compliments.”
Flora rose and they entered the room
where the hired men were gathering for the meal.
When it was over, they returned to the smaller room
and found seats near an open window, Grant smoking,
Flora embroidering, while Edgar mused as he watched
her. Dressed in some simple, light-colored material,
which was nevertheless tastefully cut, she made an
attractive picture in the plainly furnished room, the
walls of which made an appropriate frame of uncovered
native pine, for he always associated her and her
father with the land to which they belonged.
There was nothing voluptuous in any line of the girl’s
face or figure; the effect was chastely severe, and
he knew that it conveyed a reliable hint of her character.
This was not marked by coldness, but rather by an
absence of superficial warmth. The calmness of
her eyes spoke of depth and balance. She was
steadfast and consistent; a daughter of the stern,
snow-scourged North.
Then he glanced at the prairie, which
ran west, streaked with ochre stubble in the foreground,
then white and silvery gray, with neutral smears of
poplar bluffs, to the blaze of crimson where it cut
the sky. It was vast and lonely; at first sight
a hard, forbidding land that broke down the slack
of purpose and drove out the sybarite. He had
sometimes shrunk from it, but it was slowly fastening
its hold on him, and he now understood how it molded
the nature of its inhabitants. For the most
part, they were far from effusive; some of their ways
were primitive and perhaps slightly barbarous, but
there was vigor and staunchness in them. They
stuck to the friends they had tried and were admirable
in action; it was when, as they said, they were up
against it that one learned most about the strong
hearts of these men and women.
“Lansing will be away some days,”
Grant said presently. “What are you going
to do next week?”
“Put up the new fence, most
likely. The land’s a little soft for plowing
yet.”
“That’s so. As you’ll
have no use for the teams, it would be a good time
to haul in some of the seed wheat. I’ve
a carload coming out.”
“A carload!” exclaimed
Edgar in surprise, remembering the large carrying
capacity of the Canadian freight-cars. “At
the price they’ve been asking, it must have
cost you a pile.”
“It did,” said Grant.
“I generally try to get down to bed-rock figure,
but I don’t mind paying it. The fellow
who worked up that wheat deserves his money.”
“You mean the seed’s worth
its price if the crop escapes the frost?”
“That wasn’t quite all
I meant. I’m willing to pay the man for
the work he has put into it. Try to figure the
cross fertilizations he must have made, the varieties
he’s tried and cut out, and remember it takes
time to get a permanent strain, and wheat makes only
one crop a year. If the stuff’s as good
as it seems, the fellow’s done something he’ll
never be paid for. Anyway, he’s welcome
to my share.”
“There’s no doubt about
your admiration for hard work,” declared Edgar.
“As it happens, you have found putting it into
practise profitable, which may have had some effect.”
Grant’s eyes twinkled.
“Now you have got hold of the
wrong idea. You have raised a different point.”
“Then, for instance, would you
expect a hired man who had no interest in the crop
to work as hard as you would?”
“Yes,” Grant answered
rather grimly; “I’d see he did. Though
I don’t often pay more than I can help, I wouldn’t
blame him for screwing up his wages to the last cent
he could get; but if it was only half the proper rate,
he’d have to do his share. A man’s
responsible to the country he’s living in, not
to his employer; the latter’s only an agent,
and if he gets too big a commission, it doesn’t
affect the case.”
“It affects the workman seriously.”
“He and his master must settle
that point between them,” Grant paused and spread
out his hands forcibly. “You have heard
what the country west of old Fort Garby it’s
Winnipeg now was like thirty years ago.
Do you suppose all the men who made it what it is got
paid for what they did? Canada couldn’t
raise the money, and quite a few of them got frozen
to death.”
It struck Edgar as a rather stern
doctrine, but he admitted the truth of it; what was
more, he felt that George and this farmer had many
views in common. Grant, however, changed the
subject.
“You had better take your two
heavy teams in to the Butte on Monday; I’ve
ordered my freight there until the sandy trails get
loose again. Bring a couple of spare horses along.
We’ll load you up and you can come in again.”
“Two Clover-leaf wagons will
haul a large lot of seed in a double journey.”
“It’s quite likely you’ll
have to make a third. Don’t you think you
ought to get this hauling done before Lansing comes
home?”
A light broke in on Edgar. Grant
was, with some reason, occasionally called hard; but
he was always just, and it was evident that he could
be generous. He meant to make his gift complete
before George could protest.
“Yes,” acquiesced Edgar;
“it would be better, because George might want
the teams, and for other reasons.”
The farmer nodded.
“That’s fixed. The agent has instructions
to deliver.”
Edgar left the homestead an hour later
and spent the Sunday resting, because he knew that
he would need all of his energy during the next few
days. At dawn on the following morning he and
Grierson started for Sage Butte, and on their arrival
loaded the wagons and put up their horses for the
night. They set out again before sunrise and
were glad of the spare team when they came to places
where all the horses could scarcely haul one wagon
through the soft black soil. There were other
spots where the graded road sloped steeply to the hollow
out of which it had been dug, and with the lower wheels
sinking they had to hold up the side of the vehicle.
Great clods clung to the wheels; the men, plodding
at the horses’ heads, could scarcely pull their
feet out of the mire, and they were thankful when
they left the fences behind and could seek a slightly
sounder surface on the grass.
Even here, progress was difficult.
The stalks were tough and tangled and mixed with
stiff, dwarf scrub, which grew in some spots almost
to one’s waist. There were little rises,
and hollows into which the wagons jolted violently,
and here and there they must skirt a bluff or strike
back into the cut-up trail which traversed it.
Toward noon they reached a larger wood, where the
trees crowded thick upon the track. When Edgar
floundered into it, there appeared to be no bottom.
Getting back to the grass, he surveyed the scene
with strong disgust; he had not quite got over his
English fastidiousness.
Leafless branches met above the trail,
and little bays strewn with trampled brush which showed
where somebody had tried to force a drier route, indented
the ranks of slender trunks. Except for these,
the strip of sloppy black gumbo led straight through
the wood, interspersed with gleaming pools.
Having seen enough, Edgar beckoned Grierson and climbed
a low hillock. The bluff was narrow where the
road pierced it, but it was long and the ground was
rough and covered with a smaller growth for some distance
on its flanks.
“There’s no way of getting
round,” he said. “I suppose six horses
ought to haul one wagon through that sloo.”
“It looks a bit doubtful,”
Grierson objected. “We mightn’t be
able to pull her out if she got in very deep.
We could dump half the load and come back for it.”
“And make four journeys?
It’s not to be thought of; two’s a good
deal too many.”
They yoked the three teams to the
first wagon, which promptly sank a long way up its
high wheels, and while the men waded nearly knee-deep
at their heads, the straining horses made thirty or
forty yards. Then Edgar sank over the top of
his long boots and the hub of one wheel got ominously
low.
“They’ve done more than
one could have expected; I hate to use the whip, but
we must get out of this before she goes in altogether,”
he said.
Grierson nodded. He was fond
of his horses, which were obviously distressed, and
flecked with spume and lather where the traces chafed
their wet flanks; but to be merciful would only increase
their task.
The whip-cracks rang out like pistol-shots;
and, splashing, snorting, struggling, amid showers
of mire, they drew the wagon out of its sticky bed.
They made another dozen yards; and then Grierson turned
the horses into one of the embayments where there
was brush that would support the wheels. Edgar
sat down, breathless, upon a fallen trunk.
“People at home have two quite
unfounded ideas about this country,” he said
disgustedly. “The first is that money is
easily picked up here which doesn’t
seem to need any remark; the second is that they have
only to send over the slackers and slouchers to reform
them. In my opinion, a few doses of this kind
of thing would be enough to fill them with a horror
of work.” He replaced the pipe he had taken
out. “It’s a pity, Grierson, but
we can’t sit here and smoke.”
They went on and nearly capsized the
wagon in a pool, the bottom of which was too soft
to give them foothold while they held up the vehicle,
but they got through it and one or two others, and
presently came out, dripping from the waist down,
on to the drier prairie. Then Edgar turned and
viewed their track.
“It won’t bear much looking
at; we had better unyoke,” he said. “If
anybody had told me in England that I’d ever
flounder through a place like that, I’d ”
He paused, seeking for words to express
himself fittingly.
“You’d have called him a liar,”
Grierson suggested.
“That hardly strikes me as strong enough,”
Edgar laughed.
They had spent two hours in the bluff
when they brought the last load through, and sitting
down in a patch of scrub they took out their lunch.
After a while Edgar flung off his badly splashed hat
and jacket and lay down in the sunshine.
“The thing’s done; the
pity is it must be done again to-morrow,” he
remarked, “In the meanwhile, we’ll forget
it; I’ll draw a veil over my feelings.”
They had finished lunch and lighted
their pipes when a buggy appeared from behind a projecting
dump of trees and soon afterward Flora Grant pulled
up her horse near by. Edgar rose and stood beside
the vehicle bareheaded, looking slender and handsome
in his loose yellow shirt, duck overalls, and long
boots, though the marks of the journey were freely
scattered about him. Flora glanced at the jaded
teams and the miry wagons and smiled at the lad.
She had a good idea of the difficulties he had overcome.
“The trail must have been pretty
bad,” she said. “I struck off to
the east by the creek, but I don’t think you
could get through with a load.”
“It was quite bad enough,”
Edgar assured her. Flora looked thoughtful.
“You have only two wagons; we
must try to send you another, though our teams are
busy. Didn’t you say Mr. Lansing would
be back in a day or two?”
“I did, but I got a note this
morning saying he thought he had better go on to Winnipeg,
if I could get along all right. I told him to
go and stop as long as he likes. Considering
the state of the trails, I thought that was wise.”
Flora smiled. She knew what
he meant, since they had agreed that all the seed
must be hauled in before his comrade’s return.
“I’m not going to thank
you; it would be difficult, and George can ride over
and do so when he comes home,” Edgar resumed.
“I know he’ll be astonished when he sees
the granary.”
“If he comes only to express
his gratitude, I’m inclined to believe my father
would rather he stayed at home.”
“I can believe it; but I’ve
an idea that Mr. Grant is not the only person to whom
thanks are due.”
Flora looked at him sharply, but she
made no direct answer.
“Your partner,” she said, “compels
one’s sympathy.”
“And one’s liking.
I don’t know how he does so, and it isn’t
from any conscious desire. I suppose it’s
a gift of his.”
Seeing she was interested, he went
on with a thoughtful air:
“You see, George isn’t
witty, and you wouldn’t consider him handsome.
In fact, sometimes he’s inclined to be dull,
but you feel that he’s the kind of man you can
rely on. There’s not a trace of meanness
in him, and he never breaks his word. In my
opinion, he has a number of the useful English virtues.”
“What are they, and are they peculiarly English?”
“I’ll call them Teutonic;
I believe that’s their origin. You people
and your neighbors across the frontier have your share
of them.”
“Thanks,” smiled Flora.
“But you haven’t begun the catalogue.”
“Things are often easier to
recognize than to describe. At the top of the
list, and really comprising the rest of it, I’d
place, in the language of the country, the practical
ability to ‘get there.’ We’re
not in the highest degree intellectual; we’re
not as a rule worshipers of beauty that’s
made obvious by the prairie towns and to
be thought poetical makes us shy. In fact, our
artistic taste is strongly defective.”
“If these are virtues, they’re
strictly negative ones,” Flora pointed out.
“I’m clearing the ground,”
said Edgar. “Where we shine is in making
the most of material things, turning, for example,
these wilds into wheatfields, holding on through your
Arctic cold and blazing summer heat. We begin
with a tent and an ox-team, and end, in spite of countless
obstacles, with a big brick homestead and a railroad
or an automobile. Men of the Lansing type follow
the same course consistently, even when their interests
are not concerned. Once get an idea into their
minds, convince them that it’s right, and they’ll
transform it into determined action. If they
haven’t tools, they’ll make them or find
something that will serve; effort counts for nothing;
the purpose will be carried out.”
Flora noticed the enthusiastic appreciation
of his comrade which his somewhat humorous speech
revealed, and she thought it justified.
“One would imagine Mr. Lansing
to be resolute,” she said. “I dare
say it’s fortunate; he had a heavy loss to face
last year.”
“Yes,” returned Edgar.
“As you see, he’s going on; though he
never expected anything for himself.”
“He never expected anything?”
Flora repeated incredulously. “What are
you saying?”
Edgar realized that he had been injudicious.
Flora did not know that Sylvia Marston was still
the owner of the farm and he hesitated to enlighten
her.
“Well,” he said, “George
isn’t greedy; it isn’t in his nature.”
“Do you mean that he’s
a rich man and is merely farming for amusement?”
“Oh, no,” said Edgar;
“far from it!” He indicated the miry wagons
and the torn-up trails. “You wouldn’t
expect a man to do this kind of thing, if it wasn’t
needful. The fact is, I don’t always express
myself very happily; and George has told me that I
talk too much.”
Flora smiled and drove away shortly
afterward, considering what he had said. She
had noticed a trace of confusion in his manner and
it struck her as significant.
When the buggy had grown small in
the distance, Edgar called to Grierson and they went
on again.