Not long since the writer had occasion
to pass through the scene of this story. It would
be hard to find anywhere a more pleasant and prosperous
land. Fertile fields and shady country roads and
pastures where sleek cattle are contentedly grazing;
great stacks of green alfalfa; farmhouses with flowers
and vines, as well as thriving kitchen gardens; windmills
that pipe houses with water as well as fill the barn
troughs; automobiles and good roads there
could hardly be a greater contrast. And it is
pleasant to hear that the pioneers who suffered incredible
hardships during the lean years are now reaping the
reward of their toil, courage and versatile, indomitable
ingenuity.
The frozen soil rattled under the
horses’ hoofs; the wagon wheels rattled on their
own account. A December wind was keen enough to
make the driver wrap his patched quilt closer and
pull his battered straw hat lower over his ears.
He was a man of thirty, with high, tanned features
and eyes that would have been handsome but for their
sullen frown.
“I should call it getting good
and ready for a blizzard,” observed the other
man on the board (seat the wagon had none); “maybe
he won’t come.”
“He’ll come fast enough,”
returned the driver; “you don’t catch buzzards
staying in for weather!”
“I don’t know. He’s
a pretty luxurious young scoundrel. Bixby says
he had a letter from him very particular
about a fire in his room, and plenty of hot water
and towels. Bixby is worried lest the boys make
a fuss with him in his hotel.”
“Bixby is a coward from Wayback,”
was the driver’s single comment or reply.
The other man eyed the dark profile at his shoulder,
out of the tail of his eye rubbing his hands up and
down his wrists under his frayed sleeves. He
was a young man, shorter of stature than the driver.
He had a round, genial, tanned face, and a bad cold
on him. His hands were bare because he had lent
his mittens to the driver; but he wore a warm, if
shabby greatcoat and a worn fur cap.
“I don’t suppose,”
he said in a careless tone, “you fellows mean
to do more than scare the lad well.”
“We scared the last man.
Doc Russell got him fairly paralyzed; told him ’bout
the Shylock that turned out the Kinneys, and Miss Kinney’s
dying in the wagon, she was so weak; and Kin somebody
(’course he didn’t mention names) shooting
that man; and their arresting Kinney, and the jury
acquitting him without leaving the box. Oh, he
told a lot of stories. Some of ’em, I guess,
he made up out of his own head; but that Iowa lawyer
swallered the whole batch, hide and hoofs and all.
And he couldn’t git out of town quick enough!
But what’s the good? Here’s this
young dude come again. Say, did you know it’s
his pa that owns most of the stock in the trust?”
“No?”
“Yes, sir. He’s got
the upper hand of ’em all. They’ve
bought up every last bit of foreclosed land ’round
here. Yes, we was so mighty smart, we fixed it
that nobody’d dare to buy; and nobody ’round
here would dare, even s’posing they got
the money, which they ain’t ”
“There certainly ain’t
much loose money ’round here, Wesley. At
least, when I ran the paper I didn’t find it;
I was glad to rent an abandoned farm and trade my
subscription list for enough corn to pay the first
instalment on some stock and a cultivator.”
“Did you pay any more?”
“No; times got worse instead
of better. I’d have lost the stock and the
cultivator and every blamed thing in the way of implement
I’ve got if it hadn’t been for you fellows
running the implement man out of the country; he’d
a chattel mortgage that was a terror. But what
were you saying about the land? Nobody would
buy?”
“Of course nobody would buy,
and we hugged ourselves we was so durned slick.
Oh, my! Now, here comes along one of them bloody
trusts that’s eating this country up, and goes
to the land company and buys the foreclosed land for
a song. It goes all the cheaper because its known
far and wide that we elected the sheriff not to enforce
writs, but to resist ’em; and the same with
all the officers; and we’re ready to shoot down
any man that tries to push us off the earth. That
scared folks, and the investment company sold cheap
as dirt. They knew they couldn’t git anybody
to take up a farm ‘round here. Look a’
there!” He jerked the point of the switch that
served for whip in the direction of a dark bulk looming
against the glowing belt of red in the west. The
outlines of a ruined chimney toppled over the misshapen
roof. The door and window openings gaped forlornly;
doors and windows were gone long since, wrenched off
for other needs. Bit by bit the house had been
nibbled at here a porch platform taken,
there a patch of weather-boarding, shingles pulled
from the roof, the corn crib a wreck, the outbuildings
carried away piece-meal until, a sadder
ruin than fire leaves, it faced the sunset and the
prairie.
“That farm belonged to as hard-working,
smart a feller as ever handled a plow. Look at
them fields, gone to desolation like everything else,
but the furrows used to be as straight’s a line
with a ruler. He fought the hard times and the
drought till his wife died, and then he said to me,
’I’m beat; I’m going to take the
baby back to Winnie’s folks. If I’d
only gone last year I could have took Winnie, too.
The company kin have my farm, and I hope to God it’ll
be the curse to them it’s been to me!’
There the farm is. And look further down” shifting
the switch to another direction “there’s
another dropping to pieces. Lord, when I think
of the stories they told me about the crops when I
fust came and put in four hundred dollars that I’d
worked hard for in a saw-mill, and I think how we
used to set ’round the fire evenings, my wife
and I, talking about how the town was a-growing and
what it would be when the trees was growed and our
children was going to school, and how we’d have
a cabinet organ and we’d have a top buggy, and
we’d send for her mother, who didn’t jest
like it with Bill’s wife we was jest
like children, making believe! But that ain’t
what I was driving at. Here it is. We calculated
that we’d be let alone, because the poor, miserable
remnants of stock and machines and farms we got simply
wasn’t worth outside folks taking, and inside
folks wouldn’t risk their lives by dispossessing
us. That’s how we sized it up, ain’t
it?”
“I don’t see yet what you’re after,
Wesley.”
“You will. We reasoned
that way. But along comes this company, this trust,
that’s clean against the laws and don’t
give a curse for that, and it buys up the whole outfit.
I tell you, Mr. Robbins, there ain’t five men
in this community that that trust ain’t got the
legal right to turn out on the prairies to-morrow.
They’ve all been foreclosed, and the year of
grace is up. Most of us here ain’t got no
show at all legally. And so they send
a man down here to see about gitting out writs and
finishing us up.”
“But who’ll they get to buy, Wesley Orr?”
“They’re not needing much
buying. They’re on to a new scheme going
to turn all these farms into big pastures and fatten
cattle with alfalfa, raise it and ship it; then the
lower part of the county, down below town, they intend
to run a ditch through from the river and irrigate
it. They will fetch in a colony who’ll
pay them about ten times what they paid, I expect,
and ”
“But we won’t let them ”
“Depends on how many guns the
colony’s got and how much fight there’s
in it. They’ll try it, anyhow, unless ”
“Unless ” repeated Robbins
uneasily.
“Unless they’re scared
off, unless they think it’s death for a man
to tackle us.”
Robbins rubbed his hands harder; he
bit his lip. A little space of silence fell between
them. Off to the south, where the little town
was set like an island in the darkening prairie, the
lights began to twinkle; they were yellow and scattered.
Even at that distance one could tell that they burned
few to the house.
“I kinder wish,” said
Robbins, “that he came from another town.”
“What’s the difference about the town?”
“Oh, none, I guess. But
that town, it’s in Iowa, and it sent the best
things we’ve ever had. One woman put in
a lot of jams and jellies and tea such
tea! My wife was sick then, and I didn’t
know but I’d lose her. I gave her some
of that tea and some jam, and she began to pick up
from that day. It was a quince jam, and made her
think of home, she said. Her father was a Connecticut
man, and they had an orchard with quince trees in
it I remember ” He did
not finish the sentence, but he sighed as he absently
ran his eye over the gaps in the harness mended with
rope.
“I bet he didn’t
have nothing to do with that box,” said Orr;
“most like, the people sent us that were poor
folks themselves, and had to pinch to make up for
the things they sent us. ’Tain’t the
rich people are sorriest for poor folks. This
young Wallace his father’s the owner
of a big paper, and rich besides, and he’s got
this boy in training for editor; and when that first
duck couldn’t do nothing out here, the old man
said he’d buy in, and the young one thought it
a mighty smart thing to do to come over here and turn
a lot of half-starved women and children out in winter.
What’s he care? What do any of these
rich folks care?”
“I don’t think you’re
fair, Wesley,” said Robbins. “All
the rich folks aren’t mean. I know more
about them than you.” He spoke with a dawning
of pride in his tone, which deepened a little.
“Yes, I know you used to belong
to them,” said Orr, “and I guess you were
decent to the poor. But you’ll admit you
didn’t have no notion how it cuts to work every
muscle in you and to lay awake thinking yourself half
crazy to puzzle out better ways to make money and yet
to feel every year you’re a-sinking deeper in
the slough! I’ve worked five years here,
and ’cepting the first year, every single year
has piled interest on the mortgage. Every year
we’ve had less clothes to wear and poorer stuff
to eat, and it’s been mend instead of buy, and
we’ve had more debts and more worries every
year. I tell you, Mr. Robbins, I thought it would
kill me, once, to come on the county. I’d
‘a’ said I’d starve first; but you
can’t see your wife and children starve.
I went in last winter, and asked for relief.
I’d that old hound dog of mine with me; you knowed
him. He’d been a good dog. He come
with us when we come here, running under the wagon.
All the children had played with him. I took him
into town, and I asked every one I knowed would he
have that dog for a gift; I showed off all his tricks,
feeling like I was dirty mean deceiving him, for I
done it so somebody would be willing to take him home
and feed him and take care of him, for it’s
God’s truth I hadn’t enough for him and
the children too. But nobody wanted him; he was
pretty old, and he wasn’t never handsome.
And one store I was in, as I went out I heard a drummer
that was trying to sell goods say, ’I saw that
feller at the Relief, but I notice he’s able
to keep a dog. Lets the children go hungry ruther’n
the dog, I guess.’ I kinder turned on him,
then I turned back again, and I whistled to Sport,
and I looked at him and saw how his ribs showed and
his eyes was kinder sunk. He wagged his tail and
yelped like he used to, seeing me look at him; and
then I went straight to that drug-store Billy used
to keep Billy Harvey. He moved away
last year; he was a good friend of mine. I said
to him, ’Billy, you got something that would
kill a dog in a flash, so he’d never suffer or
know what hurt him?’ And Billy he
understood, and he said he had. ’You jest
put it on his tongue and he’d never know what
killed him.’ Billy was sorry for me.
He gave it to me for nothing, and he gave me some bones
and corn bread and milk; so Sport had a good dinner.
And he come right up to me and looked me in the eyes,
wagging his tail. His eyes was kinder dim, but
they was just as loving as ever. And he was wagging
his tail when he dropped. Then I went home, and
the children asked me where was Sport, and little
Peggy cried oh, Lord!”
“It was awful hard on you, Wesley,” said
Robbins gently.
“I suppose it wasn’t nothing
to what some men have suffered. There was poor
Tommy Walker, give up his farm when it was foreclosed thought
he had to and went off tramping to Kansas
City, and after he’d tramped a week there, looking
for a job, give it up and jumped into the river.
And you know how old man Osgood killed himself, honest
a old man as ever lived; always kept his machines
under cover, too; he couldn’t stand it.
They found it harder and lots more, too;
but I’ve found it hard enough. And I know
I’d shoot that sneaking, sneering young Shylock,
and not mind it near so much as I minded killing poor
Sport.”
“I don’t know but we’d
all better quit,” said the younger man with a
sigh. “This isn’t a living country.
Three years of drought would break any country up.
It’s not meant to live in. We had a fair
crop this year, but it’s so low; and freights,
though they’re lower, are pretty high. I
don’t see any way out of it. And I declare
I think if we run this young fellow off we’ll
only get a bad name for the place.”
“I don’t care for bad
names,” said the other sullenly. “I
got a wife and three children; I was foreclosed a
year ago so’s you, so’s a lot
of the boys; we’re at the end of our string
now legally. So what did we say?
We said we didn’t care, was it legal or illegal;
that laws was made to skin the poor man; and we elected
a sheriff we could depend on not to enforce the laws,
and we druv off the bloodsuckers they sent out here.
They say one feller was killed. I don’t
know. Guess that’s one of Doc Russell’s
stories. The boys talk a lot about the cause of
all this here trouble, and how we’re going to
have a revolution, and how referendum and initiendum
will help, and how free silver will help I
guess, myself, a little more rain three years ago
when corn was up would have helped more’n anything and
they talk how they’re fighting the battles of
the poor man, and the Eastern bloodsuckers has ruined
us, and the Shylocks are devouring us, and they holler
the roof off. I listen to ’em, but I don’t
believe ’em any more than you do.”
“But,” interrupted the
other man eagerly, “I voted with the people’s
party ”
“Of course you did. We
was going to be unanimous, and you dass’n’t
stand out; but you didn’t believe in it.
Me neither. I ain’t makin’ any pretense,
but I’ll tell you it’s jest here I’m
down to bed-rock. If I let my farm be took away
and my stock, what’s going to become of my wife
and children? You can call it stealing, or resisting
the law, or anything you please, but I’ll kill
that feller before I’ll let him turn me out.”
“Don’t you think we can
scare him off? Killing’s a nasty word.”
“My father was with John Brown;
he helped kill a man. He never lost no sleep
about it; I shan’t neither. Look here, Mr.
Robbins, I got lots of time to think, winters lots.
Remorse and all them fine feelings you read of, they
don’t belong to folks that are way down in the
dirt. You got to have something to eat and wear,
and not have your stomach sassing you, and you half
froze most of the time; when your body is in sech a
fix it’s keeping your mind so full there ain’t
any show for any other feelings. And look a’
here, there’s worse” his voice
sank. “Why, you git to that pass you ain’t
able to feel for your own wife and babies. When
this morning Peggy kept hushing the baby, and she was
fretting and moaning, and Peggy says to me, couldn’t
I git a little crackers in town; maybe the baby could
eat them? I didn’t feel nothing ’cept
a numb aching. I kept saying, ’I’d
‘a’ felt that, once!’ But I didn’t
feel it now. And, all of a sudden, it come to
me ’twas because I was gitting past feeling like
you do when you’re froze, jest before you die.
I read a story once, when I was a little shaver, that
kept me awake nights many a time. It was about
a Russian nobleman out sleigh-riding with his children,
three of ’em, on one of them steppes; and the
wolves chased them. The father had a pistol,
and he would shoot one of the wolves, and then the
cowardly cusses would stop to tear the wounded critter
to pieces and eat him, giving the folks in the sleigh
a little more time; but every time the distance between
the wolves and them when they stopped was a little
smaller; but they were getting closer to the town,
and they could see the lights. So the father,
he kept on shooting, until the wolves were jumping
up and grabbing at the sleigh, and the last time he
shot a wolf he used up his last cartridge; then, when
they come after him again, when the lights were nearer,
and he knew if he could stop ’em once more he
could escape, he he throwed out one of the
children; because it was this way: if he jumped
out himself the children were so little they couldn’t
drive, and they’d be tipped up, and all three
of them lost, so he throwed out the child he loved
the best, and they got to town safely; but he went
raving crazy. Well, I thought of him, and I said,
if baby died there’d be the more chance for the
others ”
“Look here, Wesley,” his
companion interrupted, “quit it!
You’re getting light-headed. Get rid of
such fool thoughts as those or you’ll be going
off to the insane asylum; and mighty little use your
family will have of you there!”
Orr gave him no answer. Robbins
watched his impassive face and frowned.
“He’s not bad-hearted,
but he’s desperate. You can’t appeal
to a desperate man,” he thought, “and
the other boys are the same way. There’ll
be wild work there to-night, unless that young fool
has the papers with him and will give them up.
You’re a fool, George Robbins, to mix yourself
up in it on the chance of getting a few dollars from
a Kansas City paper for a telegram!”
Silently the two men looked at the
nearing lights, while the wagon creaked and swayed
and rattled over the road.
“We got to save the lantern
to go home by,” Orr remarked at last, “else
I’d light up; they ain’t got any more lights
in the streets. But I guess we can see.”
There were enough lights in the windows
to reveal the wide untidiness of the street, the black,
boarded windows of the empty shops, the gaps in the
sidewalk, the haggard gardens, where savage winds had
blown the heart out of deserted rose-trees and geraniums.
In general the sky-line was low and the roofs the
simplest peaks; but it was broken in a few places
by three and four storied brick buildings of the florid
pomp on which a raw Western town loves to lavish its
money. Now they loomed, dark and silent, landmarks
of vanished ambition. Robbins, who was a man
of parts and education, with a fanciful turn, felt
the air of defeat and desolation hanging over the
town choke him like miasma. To him the dreariness
was the more poignant for the half a dozen little shops
that still flickered their challenge to fate in the
guise of a dim coal-oil lamp in the window. There
appeared to be no customers at these dismal marts;
in some cases not even the shop-keeper was visible,
and only the stove in the rear of the room kept a
lonesome red eye on the shelves. The sole sparks
of life in the place were at the hotel. It had
been built “during the boom” a
large rectangle of wood, with a cheap and gaudy piazza,
all painted four shades of green, which the climate
had burned and blistered and bleached into one sickly,
mottled brown. Long ago the stables of the hostelry
had been abandoned, but this night the stable yard
was full of wagons.
The upper story of the hotel was dark,
and the greater part of the lower story; but the kitchen
was bright, and yellow light leaked through every
chink and crack in the office blinds.
“Boys have turned out well, I guess,”
said Robbins.
“They better turn out!” said Orr.
No word was spoken by either while
they unhitched their horses, led them within the sheds,
and tied them among the sorry company already housed.
Robbins noted that after Orr had laid the blanket which
had served them for robe on one thin back, he flung
his own quilt over the other. Then they stumbled
(for they were unwieldy with cold) through the yard
to the hotel.
The office was full of men, gathered
about the stove, talking to each other. The innkeeper
sat behind his counter, affecting to busy himself
with a blotted ledger. Originally he had been
a stout man, but he had lost flesh of late years.
He was wrinkled and flabby, and the furtive eyeshots
that he cast toward the stove were anxious beyond his
concealing. Any one, however, could perceive that
matters of heavy import were being discussed.
The miserably clad men about the stove all looked
sullen. There was none of the easy-going badinage
so habitual with Westerners. They exchanged glances
rather than words; what words were spoken were uttered
in low tones.
“Where is he?” said Orr,
in the same undertone to a large man in a buffalo
coat. The large man was the sheriff of the county.
He jerked his thumb over his shoulder in the direction
of the dining-room.
“What’s he like?”
“Little feller with a game leg.”
Orr frowned. Robbins felt uncomfortable.
A gaunt man on the outskirts of the circle added:
“He’s powerful slick, though; you can bet
your life. That girl Susy is all won over already;
and she’s suspecting something, sure’s
shooting. I guess she’s warned him there’s
something in the air.”
“Well, if there is, I don’t know it,”
said the sheriff.
“You never will know
anything about it, either,” a gray-haired man
added.
“That’s right, Kinney,”
two or three spoke at once. But immediately a
silence fell on them. Robbins, who felt himself
an outsider, could see that the others drew closer
together. Once or twice he caught sinister murmurs.
He began to wish that he had not come.
“It would be no earthly use
for me to chip in and try to soften them,” he
thought. “They’re crazy with defeat
and misery and the fool stuff campaign orators have
crammed down their throats.”
Just then the dining-room door opened,
and Robbins was the only one of the group to turn
his head. The other men gazed at the fire, and
the heavy silence grew heavier.
The man who came out of the room was
young, slight of figure, and he limped a little.
Nevertheless, there was nothing of dejection in his
bearing or his face. He was freckled to a degree,
smooth-shaven, and his teeth were beautiful.
He had fine eyes also, a deep blue, flashing like
steel as they moved from one object to another.
The eyes were keen, alert, and determined; but being
set rather wide apart under his light brows, they
gave the face a candid, almost artless, look, and when
he smiled the deep dimple in his cheek made it as
merry as a child’s.
“Good evening, gentlemen,”
said he cheerfully. No one responded. Robbins
made a gurgle in his throat, which the newcomer generously
accepted for salutation, promptly approaching the
fire at Robbins’ elbow.
“Cold weather,” said he.
Two or three of the company lifted their heads and
eyed the speaker. Robbins wondered were they as
keenly conscious as he of the young fellow’s
trimly fitted clothes, what good quality that rough
plaided brown stuff was, how dainty was his linen.
He looked at the home people’s ragged coats,
he thought of the poverty that he knew, and the reflection
of a sneer was on his own lips, and, somehow, a lump
in his throat.
“Too cold weather for folks
to travel unless they’re wanted bad!” said
the gray-haired man on the edge of the company.
There was a thrill of some strong feeling in his deep
voice.
“It does seem that way,”
agreed the young man with undiminished vivacity.
“I am glad to get to a shelter. By the way,
I hear this is a dry town. Will some of you gentlemen
have something with me?” He had pulled out a
flask and was flashing his brilliant smile at Robbins.
“No, thank you, I don’t
drink,” said Robbins; but he felt his throat
itching at the sight.
“We’ll drink your licker
after we’ve finished our business with you,”
the gray man struck in. He was old Captain Sparks,
who had been very bitter since his eldest son went
crazy with overwork and sunstroke and killed himself.
The other men laughed. They looked at each other;
they looked with goading hate in their dull eyes at
the stranger; and they laughed.
“Here, Johnny,” said the
young man, taking no notice, “run up to twenty-five
and fetch me the bag there, the black one. If
we are to drink to our business, I want you all to
join. You are all interested, I take it?
And get some glasses while you are about it.”
The boy whom he addressed, the landlord’s
son, a lad of twelve, had been busy staring at the
stranger ever since he entered the room. He ran
away, but as he ran could not restrain himself from
flinging one or two glances back over his shoulder.
“Don’t you smoke, either?”
said the stranger to Robbins, his hand to his breast
pocket.
“Only a pipe,” answered
Robbins. He wished that he didn’t feel an
absurd, morbid sympathy for the poor fool’s pluck
sneaking into his consciousness.
“What are we waiting for?”
The captain whispered it to a mild-eyed, short-bearded
man next him; but the captain’s whisper carried
far. “Aw, give him rope!” suggested
the mild-eyed man; “maybe he ain’t so sandy’s
he seems.”
Not seeming to recognize any chill
in his reception, the young stranger approached the
stove. No one moved to admit him to the inner
circle; this, also, he did not seem to observe.
“This whole country looks as if you had been
having hard times,” he continued. His voice
had full, rich, magnetic notes, but its unfamiliar
intonations jarred on his hearers; they knew them
to belong to the East, and they hated the East.
“It’s pretty sad to ride through miles
and miles of farming country and see the burned fence-posts
that caught fire from the cinders, just lying where
they fell, and the smoke not coming out of one farm-house
chimney in six. It looks as if the farmers out
this way had simply given up the fight.”
“You’ve hit it,”
said the mild-eyed man; “they have. Some
of them have moved away and some of them have killed
themselves, after they’ve lost their stock on
chattel mortgages and lost their land to the improvement
company. There ought to be lots of ghosts on those
abandoned farms and in those houses where the fences
are down. This country is full of ghosts.
We ain’t much better than ghosts ourselves.”
“It was the three dry years, I suppose.”
“That and the mortgage sharks
and the Shylocks from the East,” old Captain
Sparks interrupted in a venomous tone; “what
pickings the drought left they got.”
“Pretty rough!” said the
stranger, declining the combat again. “There’s
one man I want to meet here; his name is Russell Doctor
Russell.”
The mild-eyed man explained that his
name was Russell; the other men looked puzzled and
suspicious. “What’s his little game?”
whispered the captain. “It won’t
go, whatever it is,” said the man next him.
Robbins heard question and answer distinctly; but
the young fellow near him did not wince. “Are
you the one that wrote to Fairport, Doctor Russell?
I guess you must be.”
“Yes, I wrote to Fairport,” said Russell.
“Well, I hope you liked the
barrel we sent, and the boxes. They were going
to send them to another place, but your letter decided
us. That’s my church, you know, which sent
them. And, for that matter, it was your letter
first turned my father’s attention to investing
in your part of the country. Oh, tell me, where
did that tea go? My mother would send
her best London mixture ”
“Was it your mother?”
Robbins spoke. With a red face and a flash of
his eyes at the sullen group about him, he withdrew
his chair, making a clear passage to the stove.
“I’d like to thank her, then, and her son
for her; that tea and that quince jam whose
was the quince jam?”
“I rather think my mother put that in, too.”
“Well, it almost cured my wife;
it was better than medicine, that and the tea, for,
not to mention that we couldn’t get any medicine,
it put heart into her as medicine couldn’t.
I wonder was it your mother, or who was it put in
that volume of college songs? I got that.
You wouldn’t think it, but I’m a university
man Harvard ”
The young fellow caught his hand and
gripped it hard. “Harvard? So am I Martin
Wallace, ’92.”
“My name is George Robbins,
and I’m a good deal farther back; and, as you
can see, I’m down on my luck. But there’s
no need going into my hard-luck story; it’s
like a lot of our stories here. You see where
we are hardly shoes to our feet; not because
we have been shiftless or idle, or have wronged anybody;
yet the cutthroats and thieves in the penitentiary
have had better fare and suffered less with cold and
hunger than we have. And it’s not that
we are fools, either; we’re not uneducated.
There are at least three other college men in our community;
there’s Doc Russell ”
“I am,” drawled
Russell; “much good it’s done me; but I
won honors at the University of Iowa.”
“I didn’t win any honors,
but I went to the State University was
graduated there before I went to Harvard. But you
aren’t Teddy Russell, Teddy Russell of the Glee
Club and the football eleven?”
“Yes, I am Teddy Russell.”
“E. D. Russell, of course;
why didn’t I guess? You were there two years
before me, but I daresay they are talking of you still;
and the way you won a touchdown with a broken rib
on you, and the time all the rest of the Glee Club
missed the train at Fairport, going to Lone Tree, and
you went on with the banjoes and were the whole thing
for three-quarters of an hour! Well, I’m
glad to meet you, Doctor. Let us have a good song
or two together after business.”
Russell unconsciously felt for the
cravat which was not round his soiled and frayed collar;
he buttoned his wreck of a frock coat. “Yes,
we will,” he began, but his voice stuck in his
throat as the captain’s rough grasp gripped
his arm.
“I guess not,” said the
captain; “business first, young feller!”
Russell shook off the hand, muttering
something too low for Robbins’ ear; but Robbins
sidled nearer to him, so near that he was able to
exchange a single glance and to see Russell’s
lips form the words, “Watch Orr!” They
understood each other.
“Weren’t you from Ann
Arbor yourself, Captain?” said Robbins, grabbing
at any straw of peace.
“I’ve been too poor ever
since the war to remember whether I ever had a college
education or not,” retorted the captain with
a sneer. “I belong to the people now; their
cause is my cause. Where do you belong?
We’ve tended your folks when you were sick,
and helped you lay by your crops, and driven the mortgage
sharks off your stuff. Say, what are you doing
now? Are you monkeying around to turn traitor
or coward, or what’s the matter?”
“We’re all right, Captain,”
answered Russell, the western burr on his tongue as
soft and leisurely as ever, and no hint of excitement
in his manner; “but I see no harm in letting
Mr. Wallace answer our questions before we fly off
the handle.” So saying, before the captain
realized his purpose he edged through the crowd to
Wallace’s side. Robbins followed him; and
the eyes of all the others turned to the three menacing
and eager.
“All I ask is to answer questions
and to make my proposition to you,” said Wallace,
his fearless young eyes running round the circle.
“If you don’t like it you can refuse and
send me home to make other arrangements.”
“No, we ain’t going to
send you home,” said Orr. It was the first
time that he had spoken. Wallace flashed a keen
glance at him and spoke his next words directly to
him. “But I’m sure you won’t
want to do it. You see, I’m your last chance
and you have to examine it!”
They had not expected such an answer.
A little vibration ran like a wave over the gaunt,
ferociously attentive faces. Wallace’s eyes
were fixed on Orr’s face, which did not change.
Orr’s hand was in the breast of his ragged waistcoat.
“You people have certainly had
the devil’s own time and through no fault of
yours, unless it’s a fault that you aren’t
quitters!”
“That’s right,”
said Robbins. Orr’s eyes narrowed a little.
Wallace continued, not taking his own eyes off the
farmer’s:
“This country is all right when
there’s a good year, but the good years come
so seldom! What you fellows need down here is
not free silver, but free water. With plenty
of water you can raise big crops; and down in this
valley there is not the danger, if we dig ditches,
of the river running dry; we can get ”
“And who’ll pay for irrigation?”
a voice demanded. Wallace did not shift his gaze
to the speaker; he talked to Orr as if Orr were the
only man in the room: “We expect to furnish
the money.”
“And what will happen till the ditches are digged?”
“There’s alfalfa to be raised on all these
abandoned fields.”
“And what’s to become
of us?” said Orr. “I can see
where you folks can git a holt and come out even;
but what’s going to become of us? Are we
to move off the earth and let you stay here?”
Every one listened for Wallace’s
answer. Even the boy in the doorway, returning
with Wallace’s bag, stood half scared at the
foot of the stairs, not daring to go forward.
“Why not stay and take pot luck
with us?” said Wallace, coolly. “We
bought the mortgages cheap, and we’ll sell them
cheap. We’ll sell water rights cheap also.
And you will make better colonists than any we could
import cheaper, too. It’s for
our interests as well as yours to make a deal with
you and to make one that will be satisfactory.
Isn’t it?”
Orr’s hand dropped to his side,
he shuffled his feet, his eyes turned from Wallace
to seek the captain. “I hadn’t figured
it out you was going to make any such proposition,”
said the captain.
“Perhaps you thought we intended
to chuck you all out in the cold and hog everything.
We are neither such pigs nor such fools. You fellows
can help us more than anybody else. Here is Johnny.
Now, let’s come to business; but first, Johnny,
get some glasses. We’ll all drink to the
new deal.”
And afterwards they told with chuckles
how even the captain, who was an original Prohibitionist
before he became a Populist, touched his lips to the
glass that was passed over the big map.
“All you folks here need is
hope,” said the cheerful young Iowan;
“you have plenty of pluck and plenty of sense
and oodles of experience; and we stand ready to put
in the capital. Now, what do you say; does it
go?”
After an hour of talk over the maps,
he repeated the question, and the captain himself
led the chorus, “It goes. We’ll all
stand by you!”
The blizzard had not come, and the
moon was shining when George Robbins and Wesley Orr
drove home from town. A basket was carefully held
on Orr’s knees. Robbins was caroling the
chorus to “Johnny Harvard” and wishing
a health to him and his true love at the top of a hoarse
and husky voice. Orr looked solemnly ahead into
the little wavering disk of radiance that their lantern
cast. Once he shivered violently, but he was
not cold. Suddenly he spoke. There was a
quiver in his face and his voice, but all he said
was: “Say, he was dead right. We was
so desperate we was crazy. Hope, that was what
we needed, and he give it to us; but how some fellers
would have messed that job, getting round to that same
proposal we all wanted to hug him for! And I’m
glad he didn’t. I’m almighty glad
we didn’t git a chance to do what we set out
to do. He was slick. Say, what is it they
call them newspaper boys? Spellbinders?
That’s him a first-class, A-number-one
spellbinder!”