Summer drew on with swift strides.
Crimson flowers flecked the prairie grass, the wild
barley waved its bristling ears along the trails,
saskatoons glowed red in the shadows of each bluff.
Day by day swift-moving clouds cast flitting shadows
across the sun-scorched plain, but though they shed
no moisture the wheat stood nearly waist-high upon
the Marston farm. The sand that whirled about
it did the strong stalks no harm.
Earlier in the season there had been
drenching thunder showers, and beyond the grain the
flax spread in sheets of delicate blue that broke
off on the verge of the brown-headed timothy.
Still farther back lay the green of alsike and alfalfa,
for the band of red and white cattle that roamed about
the bluffs; but while the fodder crop was bountiful
George had decided to supplement it with the natural
prairie hay. There was no pause in his exertions;
task followed task in swift succession. Rising
in the sharp cold of the dawn, he toiled assiduously
until the sunset splendors died out in paling green
and crimson on the far rim of the plain.
The early summer was marked by signs
of approaching change in Sage Butte affairs.
There were still a few disturbances and Hardie had
troubles to face, but he and his supporters noticed
that the indifference with which they had been regarded
was giving place to sympathy. When Grant first
visited the settlement after his misadventure, he
was received with expressions of indignant commiseration,
and he afterward told Flora dryly that he was astonished
at the number of his friends. Mrs. Nelson and
a few of the stalwarts pressed Hardie to make new
and more vigorous efforts toward the expulsion of
the offenders, but the clergyman refrained. Things
were going as he wished; it was scarcely wise to expose
such a tender thing as half-formed opinion to a severe
test, and the failure that might follow a premature
attempt could hardly be recovered from. It seemed
better to wait until Grant’s assailants should
be arrested, and the story of their doings elicited
in court, to rouse general indignation, and he thought
this would happen. Flett had disappeared some
weeks ago and nothing had been heard of him, but Hardie
believed his chiefs had sent him out on the robbers’
trail. The constable combined sound sense with
dogged pertinacity, and these were serviceable qualities.
It was a hot afternoon when George
brought home his last load of wild sloo hay, walking
beside his team, while Flora curbed her reckless horse
a few yards off. She had ridden over with her
father, and finding that George had not returned,
had gone on to prevent a hired man from being sent
for him. They had met each other frequently of
late, and George was sensible of an increasing pleasure
in the girl’s society; though what Flora felt
did not appear. Behind them the jolting wagon
strained beneath its high-piled load that diffused
an odor of peppermint; in front the shadow of a bluff
lay cool upon the sun-scorched prairie.
“I suppose you heard that Baxter
lost a steer last week,” she said. “Most
likely, it was killed; but, though the police searched
the reservation, there was no trace of the hide.
We have had a little quietness, but I’m not
convinced that our troubles won’t break out
again. Nobody seems to have heard anything of
Flett.”
“He’s no doubt busy somewhere.”
“I’m inclined to believe
so, and, in a way, his silence is reassuring.
Flett can work without making a disturbance, and that
is in his favor. But what has become of Mr. West?
We haven’t seen much of him of late.”
“He has fallen into a habit
of riding over to the settlement in his spare time,
which isn’t plentiful.”
“Ah!” exclaimed Flora;
“that agrees with some suspicions of mine.
Don’t you feel a certain amount of responsibility?”
“I do,” George admitted.
“Still, he’s rather head-strong, and he
hasn’t told me why he goes to the Butte; though
the girl’s father gave me a hint. I like
Taunton he’s perfectly straightforward and
I’d almost made up my mind to ask your opinion
about the matter, but I was diffident.”
“I’ll give it to you without
reserve there’s no ground for uneasiness
on West’s account; he might fall into much worse
hands. If Helen Taunton has any influence over
him, it will be wisely used. Besides, she has
been well educated; she spent a few years in Montreal.”
“She has a nice face; in fact, she’s decidedly
pretty.”
“And that would cover a multitude of shortcomings?”
“Well,” said George, thoughtfully,
“mere physical beauty is something to be thankful
for; though I’m not sure that beauty can be,
so to speak, altogether physical. When I said
the girl had a nice face, I meant that its expression
suggested a wholesome character.”
“You seem to have been cultivating
your powers of observation,” Flora told him.
“But I’m more disposed to consider the
matter from Helen’s point of view. As
it happens, she’s a friend of mine and I’ve
reasons for believing that your partner’s readily
susceptible and inclined to be fickle. Of course,
I’m not jealous.”
George laughed.
“He’s too venturesome
now and then, but he has been a little spoiled.
I’ve an idea that this affair is likely to be
permanent. He has shown a keen interest in the
price of land and the finances of farming, which struck
me as having its meaning.”
They had now nearly reached the bluff
and a horseman in khaki uniform rode out of it to
meet them.
“I’ve been over to your
place,” he said to George, when he had dismounted.
“I was sent to show you a photograph and ask
if you can recognize anybody in it?”
He untied a packet and George studied
the picture handed him. It showed the rutted
main street of a little western town, with the sunlight
on a row of wooden buildings. In the distance
a band of cattle were being driven forward by two
mounted men; nearer at hand a few wagons stood outside
a livery stable; and in the foreground three or four
figures occupied the veranda of a frame hotel.
The ease of their attitudes suggested that they did
not know they were being photographed, and their faces
were distinct. George looked triumphantly excited
and unhesitatingly laid a finger on one face.
“This is the man that drove
off Mr. Grant’s Percheron and stabbed my horse.”
The trooper produced a thin piece
of card and a small reading-glass.
“Take another look through this;
it came along with the photograph. Now, would
you be willing to swear to him?”
“I’ll be glad to do so,
if I have the chance. Shall I put a mark against
the fellow?”
“Not on that!” The trooper
handed George the card, which proved to be a carefully
drawn key-plan of the photograph, with the figures
outlined. “You can mark this one.”
George did as he was told, and then
handed the photograph to Flora.
“How did your people get it?” he asked
the trooper.
“I can’t say; they don’t go into
explanations.”
“But what do you think? Did Flett take
the photograph?”
“No, sir; I heard him tell the
sergeant he knew nothing about a camera. He may
have got somebody to take it or may have bought the
thing.”
“Do you know where he is?”
“I only know he got special
orders after Mr. Grant was robbed. It’s
my idea he was somewhere around when the photograph
was taken.”
“I wonder where it was taken?
In Alberta, perhaps, though I’m inclined to
think it was on the other side of the frontier.”
“That is my opinion,”
said Flora. “There’s not a great
difference between us and our neighbors, but the dress
of the mounted men and the style of the stores are
somehow American. I’d say Montana, or perhaps
Dakota.”
“Montana,” said the trooper.
“The big bunch of cattle seems to fix it.”
“Then you think Flett is over
there?” asked George. “I’m
interested, so is Miss Grant, and you needn’t
be afraid of either of us spreading what you say.”
“It’s my notion that Flett
has spotted his men, but I guess he’s now watching
out near the boundary in Canada. These rustler
fellows can’t do all their business on one side;
they’ll have to cross now and then. Flett’s
in touch with some of the American sheriffs, who’ll
give him the tip, and the first time the fellows slip
over the frontier he’ll get them. That
would suit everybody better and save a blamed lot of
formalities.”
Flora nodded.
“It strikes me as very likely;
and Flett’s perhaps the best man you could have
sent. But have you shown the photograph to my
father?”
“I did that before I left the
homestead. There’s nobody in the picture
like the fellow who drove with Mr. Grant, and he tells
me he saw nobody else. Now I must be getting
on.”
He rode away, and Flora reverted to
the topic she and George had been discussing.
“So you believe Mr. West is
thinking of living here altogether! I suppose
he would be able to take a farm of moderate size?”
“It wouldn’t be very large;
he can’t have much money, but his people would
help him to make a start if they were satisfied.
That means they would consult me.”
Flora smiled.
“And you feel you would be in
a difficult position, if you were asked whether it
would be wise to let him marry a prairie girl?
Have you formed any decision about the matter?”
She spoke in an indifferent tone,
but George imagined that she was interested.
“I can’t see why he shouldn’t do
so.”
“Think a little. West
has been what you call well brought up, he’s
fastidious, and I haven’t found English people
free from social prejudices. Could you, as his
friend, contemplate his marrying the daughter of a
storekeeper in a rather primitive western town?
Taunton, of course, is not a polished man.”
“I don’t think that counts;
he’s a very good type in spite of it. The
girl’s pretty, she has excellent manners, and
she strikes me as having sense and in some
respects Edgar has very little. I’ll admit
that at one time I might not have approved of the
idea, but I believe I’ve got rid of one or two
foolish opinions that I brought out with me.
If Miss Taunton is what she appears to be, he’s
lucky in getting her. Don’t you think
so?”
He had spoken with a little warmth,
though, as Flora knew, he was seldom emphatic; and
a rather curious expression crept into her face.
He did not quite understand it, but he thought she
was pleased for some reason or other!
“Oh,” she said lightly, “I have
told you my opinion.”
Nothing further was said about the
subject, but George walked beside his team in a state
of calm content. His companion was unusually
gracious; she made a picture that was pleasant to watch
as she sat, finely poised, on the big horse, with
the strong sunlight on her face. Her voice was
attractive, too; it reached him, clear and musical,
through the thud of hoofs and the creak of slowly-turning
wheels, for he made no attempt to hurry his team.
When they reached the homestead, the
conversation centered on the constable’s visit;
and when the Grants left, Edgar stood outside with
George, watching the slender mounted figure grow smaller
beside the jolting buggy.
“George,” he said, “I’ve
met very few girls who could compare with Flora Grant,
taking her all round.”
“That’s correct,”
George told him. “As a matter of fact,
I’m doubtful whether you have met any who would
bear the comparison. It was the sillier ones
who made a fuss over you.”
“I know of one,” Edgar
resumed. “As it happens, she’s in
Canada.”
“I’d a suspicion of something
of the kind,” George said dryly.
Edgar made no answer, but presently
he changed the subject.
“What’s the least one
could take up a farm here with, and have a fair chance
of success?”
“One understands it has been
done with practically nothing on preempted land, though
I’m rather dubious. In your case, I’d
fix five thousand dollars as the minimum; more would
be decidedly better.”
“Yes,” said Edgar thoughtfully;
“that’s about my idea; and I suppose it
could be raised, though my share of what was left us
has nearly all been spent in cramming me with knowledge
I’ve no great use for. Stephen, however,
has done pretty well, and I think he always realized
that it would be his privilege to give me a lift; I’ve
no doubt he’ll write to you as soon as I mention
the matter, and your answer will have its effect.”
He looked at George with anxious eyes. “I
venture to think you’ll strain a point to say
what you can in my favor?”
“In the first place, I’ll
ride over to the Butte and have supper with Taunton,
as soon as I can find the time.”
“Thanks,” responded Edgar
gratefully; “you won’t have any doubts
after that.” Then he broke into laughter.
“You’ll excuse me, but it’s really
funny, George.”
“I don’t see the joke,” George said
shortly.
Edgar tried to look serious, and failed.
“I can imagine your trying to
weigh up Helen; starting a subtle conversation to
elucidate her character, and showing what you were
after and your profound ignorance with every word;
though you mustn’t suppose I’d be afraid
of submitting her to the severest test. Why,
you wouldn’t even know when a girl was in love
with you, unless she told you so. Perhaps it’s
some excuse that your mind’s fixed on one woman
to the exclusion of all the rest, though one could
imagine that, as you think of her, she’s as
unreal and as far removed from anything made of flesh
and blood as a saint in a picture. After all,
I dare say it’s a very proper feeling.”
George left him, half amused and half
disturbed. He did not resent Edgar’s freedom
of speech, but the latter had a way of mixing hints
that were not altogether foolish with his badinage,
and his comrade was inclined to wonder what he had
meant by one suggestive remark. It troubled
him as he strolled along the edge of the tall green
wheat, but he comforted himself with the thought that,
after all, Edgar’s conversation was often unworthy
of serious consideration.
A week later George rode over to the
store at the settlement, feeling a little diffident,
because he had undertaken the visit only from a sense
of duty. He was cordially received, and was presently
taken in to supper, which was served in a pretty room
and presided over by a very attractive girl.
She had a pleasant voice and a quiet face; though
he thought she must have guessed his errand, she treated
him with a composure that set him at his ease.
Indeed, she was by no means the kind of girl he had
expected Edgar to choose; but this was in her favor.
George could find no fault in her.
Shortly after the meal was finished
his host was called away, and the girl looked up at
George with a flush of color creeping, most becomingly,
into her face.
“Edgar told me I needn’t be afraid of
you,” she said.
George smiled.
“I can understand his confidence,
though it had a better foundation than my good-nature.
I wonder whether I might venture to say that he has
shown remarkably good sense?”
“I’m glad you don’t
think he has been very foolish,” replied the
girl, and it was obvious to George that she understood
the situation.
He made her a little grave bow.
“What I’ve said, I’m
ready to stick to. I’m a friend of Edgar’s,
and that carried an obligation.”
“Yes,” she assented, “but
it was because you are a friend of his and, in a way,
represent his people in England, that I was a little
uneasy.”
Her speech implied a good deal and
George admired her candor.
“Well,” he said, “so
far as I am concerned, you must never feel anything
of the kind again. But I think you should have
known it was quite unnecessary.”
She gave him a grateful glance and
soon afterward her father came in.
“Guess we’ll take a smoke
in the back office,” he said to George.
George followed him, and thought he
understood why he was led into the little untidy room
strewn with packets of goods, though his host had a
fine commodious house. Taunton would not attempt
to dissociate himself from his profession; he meant
to be taken for what he was, but he knew his value.
He was a gaunt, elderly man: as far as his general
appearance went, a typical inhabitant of a remote and
half-developed western town, though there was a hint
of authority in his face. Giving George an excellent
cigar, he pointed to a chair.
“Now,” he began, “we
must have a talk. When your partner first came
hanging round my store, buying things he didn’t
want, I was kind of short with him. Helen helps
me now and then with the books, and he seemed to know
when she came in.”
“I noticed he came home in a
rather bad temper once or twice,” George said
with a laugh. “I used to wonder, when he
produced sardine cans at supper, but after a while
I began to understand.”
“Well,” continued Taunton,
“I didn’t intend to have any blamed Percy
trying to turn my girl’s head, until I knew what
he meant. I’d nobody to talk it over with I
lost her mother long ago so I kind of froze
him out, until one day he came dawdling in and asked
if he might take Helen to Jim Haxton’s dance.
“‘Does she know you have come to me about
it?’ I said.
“‘Can’t say,’
he told me coolly, with a cigarette hanging out of
his mouth. ’I haven’t mentioned
the matter yet; I thought I’d ask you first.’
“‘S’pose I object?’ I said.
“‘Then,’ he allowed
quite tranquil, ’the thing will have to be considered.
There’s not the slightest reason why you should
object.’
“I’d a notion I could
agree with him I liked the way he talked and
I told him Helen could go, but the next time he called
he was to walk right into the office instead of hanging
round the counter. I asked him what he’d
done with all the canned truck he’d bought, and
he said he was inclined to think his partner had eaten
most of it. Since then he’s been over
pretty often, and I figured it was time I gave you
a hint.”
“Thanks,” responded George.
“He was, in a way, placed in my hands, but
I’ve no real control over him.”
“That’s so; he’s
of age. What I felt was this I’ve
nothing against West, but my girl’s good enough
for anybody, and I can’t have his people in
England looking down on her and making trouble.
If they’re not satisfied, they had better call
him back right now. There’s to be no high-toned
condescension in this matter.”
“I don’t think you need
be afraid of that,” said George. “It
would be altogether uncalled for. It’s
very likely that I shall be consulted, and I’ll
have pleasure in telling his people that I consider
him a lucky man.”
“There’s another point has
West any means?”
“I believe about five thousand
dollars could be raised to put him on a farm.”
Taunton nodded.
“It’s not very much, but
I don’t know that I’m sorry. I’ll
see they’re fixed right; whatever West gets
I’ll beat. My girl shan’t be indebted
to her husband’s folks. But there’s
not a word to be said about this yet. West must
wait another year before we decide on anything.”
George thought the storekeeper’s
attitude could not be found fault with, and when he
drove home through the soft dusk of the summer night,
he was glad to feel that there was no need for anxiety
about the choice Edgar had made.