George was tired and sleepy when he
reached the settlement early in the morning, and found
Flett at Hardie’s house. It transpired
from their conversation that there had been a disturbance
at the Sachem on the return of a party which had driven
out to the sale, and one man, who accused a companion
of depriving him of a bargain, had attacked and badly
injured him with a decanter. Flett, being sent
for, had arrested the fellow, and afterward called
upon the clergyman for information about his antecedents
and character. He listened with close attention
while George told his tale; and then examined the knife
he produced.
“This is about the limit!”
he exclaimed. “You wouldn’t have
persuaded me that the thing was possible when I was
first sent into the district. It isn’t
what one expects in the wheat-belt, and it certainly
has to be stopped.”
“Of course,” said George,
with some impatience. “But wouldn’t
it be wiser to consider the ways and means?
At present the fellows are no doubt pushing on for
the frontier with two valuable teams and a wad of
stolen bills.”
Flett smiled at him indulgently.
“This isn’t a job that
can be put through in a hurry. If they’re
heading for the boundary and I guess they
are they’ll be in Dakota or Montana
long before any of the boys I’ll wire to could
come up with them. Our authority doesn’t
hold on American soil.”
“Is that to be the end of it?”
“Why, no,” Flett answered
dryly. “As I guess you have heard, they
have had trouble of this kind in Alberta for a while;
and most every time the boys were able to send back
any American mavericks and beef-cattle that were run
into Canada. As the result of it, our chiefs
at Regina are pretty good friends with the sheriffs
and deputies on the other side. They’re
generally willing to help us where they can.”
“Then you shouldn’t have
much difficulty in trailing your men. Suppose
a fellow turned up with four exceptionally good horses
and offered them to an American farmer or dealer,
wouldn’t it arouse suspicion?”
“It might,” said Flett,
with a meaning smile. “But the thing’s
not so simple as it looks. We all know that
Canadian steers and horses have been run off and disposed
of across the frontier; and now and then a few from
that side have disappeared in Canada. This points
to there being a way of getting rid of them; some
mean white on a lonely holding will take them at half-value,
and pass them along. What we have to do is to
send a man over quietly to investigate, and get the
sheriffs and deputies to keep their eyes open.
I’m going to beg the Regina people to let me
be that man.”
“You may as well understand
that it isn’t the return of the horses Grant
wants so much as the conviction of the men who waylaid
him.”
“Then,” said Flett, pointedly, “he
must be mighty mad.”
Hardie joined in George’s laugh; but the constable
went on:
“I believe we’re going
to get them; but it will take time all summer,
perhaps. I’ve known our boys lay hands
on a man they wanted, eighteen months afterward.”
“In one way, I don’t think
that’s much to their credit,” the clergyman
remarked.
Taking up the knife George had handed
him, Flett pointed to some initials scratched on the
bone haft.
“Kind of foolish thing for the
fellow to put his name on his tools; but I don’t
know anybody those letters might stand for. Now
you describe him as clearly as you can, while I put
it down.”
George did as he was bidden, and added:
“There were two more one of them
looked like Langside and I believe a fourth
man, though I may be mistaken in this. They
were moving about pretty rapidly and the light was
bad.”
Flett got up.
“I’ll have word sent along
to Regina, and then try to locate their trail until
instructions come. I want to get about it right
away, but there’s this blamed fellow who knocked
out his partner at the Sachem, and it will take me
most of a day’s ride before I can hand him on
to Davies. It’s a charge that nobody’s
going to worry about, and it’s a pity he couldn’t
have escaped. Still, that’s the kind of
thing that can’t happen too often.”
He went out and George turned to Hardie.
“How does the matter strike you?”
“I’ve an idea that Flett
was right in saying it was the limit. There
was a certain romance about these disturbances when
they began; they were a novelty in this part of Canada.
People took them lightly, glad of something amusing
or exciting to talk about. It was through popular
indifference that the gang first gained a footing,
but by degrees it became evident that they couldn’t
be dislodged without a vigorous effort. People
shrank from making it; and, with Beamish backing them,
the fellows got steadily bolder and better organized.
All the time, however, they were really at the mercy
of the general body of orderly citizens. Now
they have gone too far; this last affair can’t
be tolerated. Instead of apathy, there’ll
be an outbreak of indignation; and I expect the people
who might have stopped the thing at the beginning
will denounce the police.”
George nodded.
“That’s my idea. What’s our
part?”
“I think it’s to assist
in the reaction. Your story’s a striking
one. We had better get it into a newspaper as
soon as possible. I suppose it would be correct
to say that Grant was cruelly beaten?”
“His face is blue from jaw to
temple. They knocked him nearly senseless with
the butt of a whip, while he was lying, helpless, on
the ground.”
“And your horse was badly wounded?”
“I wish it weren’t true;
there’s a gash about eight inches long.
If it will assist the cause, you can say the stab
was meant for me.”
“Well,” said Hardie, “I
think it will make a moving tale. I’m afraid,
however, I’ll have to lay some stress upon the
single-handed rescue.”
George looked dubious.
“I’d rather you left that out.”
“We must impress the matter
on people’s thoughts, make it command attention;
a little diplomacy is allowable now and then,”
said Hardie, smiling. “Since you don’t
mind getting yourself into trouble, I don’t
see why you should object to being held up to admiration,
and it’s in an excellent cause. Now, however,
I’ll order breakfast for you, and then you had
better get some sleep.”
During the afternoon, George set off
for home, and he was plowing for the summer fallow
a week later when Flora Grant rode up to him.
“I suppose you have got your
mail and have seen what the Sentinel says about
you?” she asked mischievously.
George looked uncomfortable, but he laughed.
“Yes,” he confessed. “It seemed
to afford Edgar some amusement.”
“Who’s responsible for
that flattering column? It doesn’t read
like the work of the regular staff.”
“I’m afraid that I am,
to some extent, though Hardie’s the actual culprit.
The fact is, he thought the course was necessary.”
“Well, I suspected something
of the kind; so did my father. It was a wise
move, and I think it will have its effect.”
George made no comment and she sat
silent a moment or two while he watched her with appreciation.
She was well-mounted on a beautiful, carefully-groomed
horse; the simple skirt and bodice of pale gray emphasized
the pure tinting of her face and hands and the warm
glow of her hair, in which the fierce sunshine forced
up strong coppery gleams. Her lips formed a patch
of crimson, there was a red band on her wide Stetson
hat, and her eyes shone a deep blue as she looked down
at George, who stood in the sandy furrow leaning against
the heavy plow. He was dressed in old overalls
that had faded with dust and sun to the indefinite
color of the soil, but they displayed the fine lines
of a firmly knit and muscular figure. His face
was deeply bronzed, but a glow of sanguine red shone
through its duskier coloring. Behind them both
ran a broad sweep of stubble, steeped in strong ochre,
relieved by brighter lemon hues where the light blazed
on it.
“Though I couldn’t resist
the temptation to tease you, I quite agree with the
Sentinel,” she resumed. “It
really was a very gallant rescue, and I suppose you
know I recognize my debt to you. I was a little
too startled to speak about it when you brought my
father home, and you went away so fast.”
“The fellows were afraid of
being identified; they bolted as soon as they saw
me.”
“One didn’t,” Flora
pointed out. “A knife-thrust, like the
one you avoided, or a pistol-shot would have obviated
any risk they ran. But of course you hate to
be thanked.”
“No,” George replied impulsively; “not
by you.”
“I wonder,” she said with
an amused air, “why you should make an exception
of me?”
“I suppose it lessens my sense
of obligation. I feel I’ve done some little
thing to pay you back.”
“I’m not sure that was
very happily expressed. Is it painful to feel
that you owe anything to your neighbors?”
George flushed.
“That wasn’t what I meant.
Do you think it’s quite fair to lay traps for
me, when you can count on my falling into them?”
He turned and pointed to the great stretch of grain
that clothed the soil with vivid green. “Look
at your work. Last fall, all that plowing was
strewn with a wrecked and mangled crop; now it’s
sown with wheat that will stand the drought.
I was feeling nearly desperate, wondering how I was
to master the sandy waste, when you came to the rescue
and my troubles melted like the dust in summer rain.
They couldn’t stand before you; you banished
them.”
She looked at him rather curiously,
and, George thought, with some cause, for he was a
little astonished at his outbreak. This was not
the kind of language that was most natural to him.
“I wonder,” she said,
“why you should take so much for granted I
mean in holding me accountable?”
“It’s obvious,”
George declared. “I understand your father;
he’s a very generous friend, but the idea of
sending me the seed didn’t occur to him in the
first place; though I haven’t the least doubt
that he was glad to act on it.”
“Ah!” said Flora, “it
looks as if you had been acquiring some penetration;
you were not so explicit the last time you insisted
on thanking me. Who can have been teaching you?
It seems, however, that I’m still incomprehensible.”
George considered. It would
be undesirable to explain that his enlightenment had
come from Edgar, and he wanted to express what he
felt.
“No,” he said, in answer
to her last remark; “not altogether; but I’ve
sometimes felt that there’s a barrier of reserve
in you, beyond which it’s hard to get.”
“Do you think it would be worth
while to make the attempt? Suppose you succeeded
and found there was nothing on the other side?”
He made a sign of negation, and she
watched him with some interest; the man was trying
to thrash out his ideas.
“That couldn’t happen,”
he declared gravely. “Somehow you make
one feel there is much in you that wants discovery,
but that one will learn it by and by. After
all, it’s only the shallow people you never really
get to know.”
“It would seem an easy task, on the face of
it.”
“As a matter of fact, it isn’t.
They have a way of enveloping themselves in an air
of importance and mystery, and when they don’t
do so, they’re casual and inconsequent.
One likes people with, so to speak, some continuity
of character. By degrees one gets to know how
they’ll act and it gives one a sense of reliance.”
He paused and added, diffidently: “Anything
you did would be wise and generous.”
“By degrees?” smiled Flora.
“So it’s slowly, by patient sapping, the
barriers go down! One could imagine that such
things might be violently stormed. But you’re
not rash, are you, or often in a hurry? However,
it’s time I was getting home.”
She waved her hand and rode away,
and George, getting into the saddle, started his team,
and thought about her while he listened to the crackling
of the stubble going down beneath the hoofs, and the
soft thud of thrown-back soil as the lengthening rows
of clods broke away from the gleaming shares.
What she might have meant by her last remark he could
not tell, though so far as it concerned him, he was
ready to admit that he was addicted to steady plodding.
Then his thoughts took a wider range, and he began
to make comparisons. Flora was not characterized
by Sylvia’s fastidious refinement; she was more
virile and yet more reposeful. Sylvia’s
activities spread bustle around her; she required
much assistance and everybody in her neighborhood was
usually impressed into her service, though their combined
efforts often led to nothing. Flora’s
work was done silently; the results were most apparent.
Still, the charm Sylvia exerted was
always obvious; a thing to rejoice in and be thankful
for. Flora had not the same effect on one, though
he suspected there was a depth of tenderness in her,
behind the barrier. It struck him as a pity
that she showed no signs of interest in West, who
of late seemed to have been attracted by the pretty
daughter of a storekeeper at the settlement; but, after
all, the lad was hardly old or serious enough for
Flora. There was, however, nobody else in the
district who was nearly good enough for her; and George
felt glad that she was reserved and critical.
It would be disagreeable to contemplate her yielding
to any suitor unless he were a man of exceptional
merit.
Then he laughed and called to his
horses. He was thinking about matters that did
not concern him; his work was to drive the long furrow
for Sylvia’s benefit, and he found pleasure in
it. Bright sunshine smote the burnished clods;
scattered, white-edged clouds drove across the sky
of dazzling blue, flinging down cool gray shadows that
sped athwart the stubble; young wheat, wavy lines
of bluff, and wide-spread prairie were steeped in
glowing color. The man rejoiced in the rush of
the breeze; the play of straining muscles swelling
and sinking on the bodies of the team before him was
pleasant to watch; he felt at home in the sun and
wind, which, tempered as they often were by gentle
rain, were staunchly assisting him. By and by,
all the foreground of the picture he gazed upon would
be covered with the coppery ears of wheat. He
had once shrunk from returning to Canada; but now,
through all the stress of cold and heat, he was growing
fond of the new land. What was more, he felt
the power to work at such a task as he was now engaged
in to be a privilege.