“Here we are! This is the
town that jack built, this is the town the poet wrote
about!” Madeira was leaning forward from the
rear seat of a high road-cart to talk to Steering,
who sat on the front seat beside the driver.
Madeira had the back seat by himself, but, leaning
forward, with both arms spraddled out behind Steering
and the driver, he seemed now and then to take possession
of the front seat, too.
“Yes!” cried the driver,
who, fearless, confident, glowing, was managing her
spirited horses skilfully, “at Joplin’s
gates, you must chant the classic, ‘Hey this,
what’s this?’”
“And up from the city rolls
the triumphant answer, ’This is the town that
jack built!’” declaimed Steering, glancing
down into the driver’s face with accordant appreciation.
He felt accordant and he felt appreciative. He
had enjoyed the little railway journey from Canaan
in company with the Madeiras. He had enjoyed
the night before, which he had spent at the house
of a Joplin friend of the Madeiras. He was enjoying
the ride now. The friend of the Madeiras had put
good horses at Madeira’s disposal and Miss Sally
Madeira could get speed out of good horses as easily
as other women get a purr out of a kitten. Even
Madeira, just behind him, crowding forward upon him,
did not very much bother Steering. It was all
enjoyable.
They were on a long wide street that
presented violently contrasted activities, hard to
encompass with one pair of eyes. For blocks the
buildings lined off on either side, low, flimsy and
hastily constructed mining-camp architecture,
that gave way at abrupt intervals to tall and sightly
brick-and-stone structures, built for the future metropolis
rather than for the present camp. A section of
an electric railway that was thirty-two miles long
ran through the street, and the handsomely equipped
cars on it clipped past mud-encrusted mule teams from
distant hill farms, prairie schooners, and
dilapidated carryalls. The scene was tremendously,
occidentally irregular, setting forth that merciless
clutch of the future upon the past that makes the present
mere transition. The town was hard pushed to
catch up with its own vast possibilities. A small
place, set suddenly forward as one of the world’s
great ore markets, it could not even house the mining
business that had poured in upon it, and that made
of its main thoroughfare a tossing, turbulent stream
of people. Almost every building that Steering
saw was crowded to the doors with mining brokers’
desks, mining brokers’ desks spilled out on
the side-walk, desks could be seen at the doors of
the retail stores and desks kept banking-house doors
from shutting. The windows of the newspaper offices
and of the mineral companies were crowded with displays
of ore. The hub-bub about these places was fierce,
unbearable. Young men, with their handkerchiefs
in their collars, hurried from one office to another,
warm with excitement, flapping great bunches of letters
and memoranda in their hands as they hurried.
Messenger boys ran up and down the streets with telegrams.
Buyers from the Kansas smelters, smelters in Illinois,
smelters up about St. Louis, smelters in Indiana,
smelters in Wales, nosed around like ferrets.
Fine young men, who were supposed to look after the
interests of the big foreign companies, sauntered
out of bar-rooms, doing violence to the supposition.
Map-sellers whacked their hands with folders.
Wooden booths flung signs to the streets bigger than
the booths themselves: “Mineral Companies
Promoted,” “Mining and Smelting,”
“Mines, Options, Leases,” there
was no end to the variations of the eternal theme of
mining. Town lots, switches of flats, and hill
ridges were being swapped and sold and leased from
the curb-stone; leases were being made from buggies
and options were being granted from a horse’s
back.
“Whewee!” marvelled Steering,
with a little itch of fear for the ore-mad people,
“legal forms are being put to fearful strains,
are they not, with all this heedless buying and selling?”
Madeira laughed loudly, “God
bless you, legal forms! All that a man who wants
to sell has to do is to throw a plank, any little rotten
plank, across the chasm of future litigation and ten
buyers will walk it with nerves of steel.”
He patted Steering’s shoulder. “My
boy, it’s this headlong impetus that assures
the success of the Canaan Company. If I get that
thing started once, all I have to do is to advertise
it down here a week. The stock will go like hot-cakes.
People don’t care what they buy, just so they
buy. They’ve got no sense of value left.
Why, a man found an outcrop of a zinc lode under his
chicken-coop yesterday and to-day the price
of chicken-coops has gone up.” Madeira
patted Steering’s shoulder again and laughed
again, pleased at his aptness in figuring the thing
out.
“He’s just exactly right,”
said the girl, nodding at Steering. “Over
here the average man needs a guardian to keep him out
of the clutches of the ‘boodlers.’
I almost hate to see this sort of excitement come into
Canaan. Father has been pretty busy all his life
looking after infant men, but from now on his plight
is going to be pitiable. I saw that yesterday
afternoon, Dad, when the farmers were filing into the
bank to put their money into your hands.”
The girl, turning back to smile at Madeira, was the
cause of Steering’s turning back, too, and he
was surprised to see a patriarchal, benign expression
on Madeira’s face, as though a reflection of
the girl’s illusions about his character lay
warm upon him.
“Oh, I don’t mind my job
as nurse for the Canaanites, Pet,” said Madeira
softly, and then waved one hand out toward the city
and changed the subject. “Pretty good for
a lazy semi-southern State, eh, Steering?” He
nudged the girl next and added: “Before
we are through with him we’ll have convinced
the New Yorker that a good deal happens outside New
York. Won’t we, Pet?”
“Yes, sirree,” said the
girl, imitating her father’s manner adroitly,
as she put her horses through the crowded thoroughfare,
“the United States of America has more than
one way of living the life strenuous, and Broadway,
New York, doesn’t begin to be the only place
where she lives it. Look abroad, look abroad!”
She was altogether fascinating as she pointed out
to Steering little typical features that he would have
missed without her humourous, boastful sallies.
As they continued on their way, Madeira
and the girl bowed and smiled to acquaintances, and
once the horses were stopped at the curb to enable
Madeira to talk to some man whom he knew well.
While waiting, with the road-cart drawn up close to
the curb, Steering and the girl could hear talk all
about them, zinc and lead, jack, jack, jack!
Flying chips of conversation assailed their ears as
the people scurried by; references to old companies
and their latest projects, and to new companies and
new finds; talk about the menace of the runs pinching
out, and talk about the danger of over-stocking the
world’s zinc markets; grumbling talk about the
wildcat exploitation going on at every corner, and
envious talk about a report that some wildcat promoter
had just succeeded in selling a face of ore that had
cut blind under the drill of the buyer in a few lamentable
days; condemnatory talk about what an extremely gold-brick
country this was, and awed talk about the remarkable
prices that some of the gold bricks fetched.
All the talk was frankly of millions. The scale
was gigantic. Even poor men seemed to have acquired
a familiarity with the sound of great sums that made
them take themselves as somehow richer and bigger.
Voices shook with eagerness and avidity; hands worked
constantly at button-holes, or at lapels, or with
watch-guards. When acquaintances passed on the
street they did not say “how-do-you-do”;
they looked at each other’s bulging pockets and
said, “lemme see your rock.”
What Steering and the girl heard as they waited in
the road-cart was fragmentary but significant:
“Scotch Company will divide off another one
hundred thousand acres, so they say No,
sirree-bob, no more hand-jigging for me Wouldn’t
take one-quarter of a million for it, if you’d
give it to me Boston Company is bound to
make millions Yes, that’s Madeira, Canaan
Tigmores Oh, he will mint money out of
it, no doubt in the world about that he goes in to
win ”
The girl turned to Steering with pleased
pride. “You see? He always wins.
People expect him to.” Madeira was over
at the edge of his seat, talking earnestly to the
man on the curb. Steering, beside the girl, looking
down at her, not seeing Madeira because of her, nodded
approvingly, the approval being for her honesty, her
sweetness, her vitality. Something, perhaps the
near climax for her father’s enterprise at Canaan,
seemed to have keyed her to a high pitch. Steering,
who by now had had opportunities to see her often,
had never seen her so beautiful, nor so quick of expression
in word and look. Her voice thrilled him; and
while he was thrilling, Madeira’s voice came
on to him: “You needn’t hold back
on that account,” Madeira was saying: “God
bless you, I’ve got the next heir in the deal,
too.”
“Oh-ho,” said the girl,
who also heard, “we are taking you for granted,
aren’t we?” Steering only smiled at her
again. He had fallen into the habit of smiling
at her, and some prescience seemed to urge him to
exercise the habit while he could.
Madeira was turning from the man on
the curb: “All right, I’ll allot you
one thousand shares, eh? Good-day. Pet,
you’d better drive on out to Chitwood, lickety-split.”
Miss Madeira put the whip to her horses,
and they left the Joplin streets behind them, and
sped out a gritty white road that crossed a lean sweep
of prairie. Ahead of them Steering could see presently
a sort of settlement; wooden sheds, wide and low;
hoister shafts, tall and slim, on stilts; scaffolding;
pipes; chimneys; tramways; surface railways.
His eyes leaped from moundlike piles of tailings, the
powdery crush spit out by the concentrating mills,
to boulder-like heaps of rocks that had been wheeled
away to save the teeth of the mills, and his ears
turned distraught from the groaning clank of unwieldy
iron tubs, swinging up through skeleton shafts, to
the sputtering plunk-plunk of drill engines and the
booming roar of machinery.
“Hard to keep up with, eh?
God bless us, it certainly is hard to keep
up with!” cried Madeira. “Drive into
the enclosure there at the Howdy-do, Pet, Throcker
will be expecting us. I telephoned him. Yes,
sir, this is the place to see what zinc means.”
Madeira was leaning forward again, one arm about his
daughter and the other arm fathering Steering.
“This is the place to understand what can be
done by seeing what has been done.” He
seemed to want to fire Steering with the idea that
just such another astounding development could be wrought
out down there in the Canaan Tigmores, and though
Steering was aware that he would soon be at a crisis
where he would need an austere strength of judgment,
uncoloured by enthusiasm of any kind, he could not
help responding to the aura of enthusiasm into which
he was entering. The great plant of the Howdy-do
mine disseminated enthusiasm in shaking vibrations.
Milled enthusiasm stood about in cars, ready for the
smelters. Enthusiasm roared and whirred from the
concentrating mill where wheels were turning and bands
were slipping; where a tub, ore-laden, was jerking
and clanking through the hoister shaft; where men
on an upper platform were shovelling the dump from
the tub into great crusher rolls; where the rolls
were grinding and pounding, and the water was fashing
and gurgling down the jigs. The whirr of it all,
the whizz and bang of it, the whole effect of it all,
was, to any man interested in the development of ore,
a great forward impetus that swung him far out, limp
and dizzy.
“Waiting for you, Mr. Madeira!”
cried a man, who fairly shone with enthusiasm, and
whose voice tinkled gladly as he came across to the
hitching rail where Miss Madeira had stopped her horses.
“Mighty glad to see you, Miss Sally Mr.
Steering, glad to meet you, sir. Here you, Mike!
come and look after these horses. Miss Sally,
I’m a-going to have to take you round to the
tool-house for some covers, please ma’am.”
The accommodating and friendly mine-boss of the Howdy-do
led Madeira’s party to a shed opposite his mill
and there outfitted them with rubber coats and caps,
talking to them all the while in that tinkling voice,
with the glad note singing in it.
“God bless my soul, Throcker,
how much did the last blast bring down?” Madeira
turned to Steering before Throcker could reply.
“Whenever a miner’s voice shakes and sings
like that, his last blast has meant a heap.”
“You are right, sir!”
cried Throcker, “we opened up a face yesterday
that, well, it’s going to take us
weeks to handle even the loose ore we’ve brought
down, sir. Come this way, Miss Sally, please ma’am.”
Steering began to wish that the mine-boss
were not so happy. It had an electric effect
upon him. And he began to wish that he himself
were not so happy. He dreaded developments that
would surely be change.
“Well, Throcker, my boy, my
ledge of Cherokee runs up here from the Canaan Tigmores,
d’you know that?” said Madeira. He
put his thumbs in his pockets and rocked upon the
balls of his feet with a springing, tip-toe movement,
as Throcker stopped them in front of a shaft out of
whose cavernous depths a cage was swinging toward them.
From Madeira’s manner you might have inferred
that the Cherokee had a Madeira permit to “run
up here.”
In the cage it was necessary for Steering
to extend his arm behind Miss Madeira, as there were
no sides between the great cables at the four corners.
It was not a very large cage and the number on it crowded
it, so that the girl rested lightly on Steering’s
arm. He could think of no place so deep down
that he would not be well satisfied to journey to it
like that.
But there came a jolt and a jar, the
cage settled upon the stope, and the journey was over.
Throcker led the way through a thick underground gloom.
Great masses of crush-rock slid under foot, there was
a black drip from ceiling and walls, and the excavation
was filled with the hollow boom of the water-and air-pumps.
With lights flaring uncertainly, they followed the
mine-boss out upon a rocky crag that gave upon a deep
abyss, faintly illuminated by the flicker of the lamps
of the working force below and by torches set in the
wall. There was an upward slope in the formation
of the ledge from the bottom of the cavern to the spur
upon which they stood, but it was made by irregular
juttings with ugly, saw-tooth projections. Unless
they were very near the edge they could not follow
the dim outline of the slope at all. Throcker
in his eagerness to point out the ore, shining like
specks of gold all up and down the slope, worked dangerously
near the edge, but he was accustomed and recovered
his balance easily when a piece of his support crumbled
away under his feet. Steering, who was agile and
athletic, had no difficulty in keeping up with the
miner, but Madeira had to be watchful. The miner
would not let Miss Madeira come far out on the crag,
though he let the men follow him, calling warnings
to them as they came.
“From where you stand, Miss
Sally,” Throcker turned toward the girl who
waited below the summit of the crag, “from where
you stand up to here, the loose ore is worth about
sixty-five thousand dollars!”
The girl looked up at them responsively.
Standing there under the strange flickering light
of her torch, with the black folds of the rubber coat
swathing her, her face, with its fine eyes, was cut
out for Steering sharp as a cameo.
“I am delighted for your sake,
Mr. Throcker,” she called gaily, but with a
little uneasiness in her voice. “Father,
please be careful.”
“Sixty-five thousand dollars!
Why, Lord love you, Throcker, a hundred thousand,
if one.” Madeira, taking charge of the probabilities
in the case, moved toward the edge to support his
estimate by measuring with his eye the distance down
the crag.
“Father, please be careful.
Watch him, Mr. Steering, O-h-h-h!”
A woman’s cry of horror rang though the tunnelled
walls as Madeira’s great frame toppled on the
edge of the crag, and disappeared.
Throwing out his right arm protectingly,
as though in answer to the girl below, Steering had
been able to knot the sinewy fingers of one hand about
Madeira’s collar as the latter fell. The
force of the fall brought Steering to his knees, then
flat out across the ledge, to get all the purchase
power he could. Madeira’s weight was terrific,
even after Steering had brought his other hand into
requisition; and though Throcker sprang to the rescue,
Throcker was a weak man and the best aid that he could
render was to assume a small share of Madeira’s
weight by getting down flat upon the ledge, after
Steering’s fashion. In the black hole below
the miners saw what had happened and two burly men
began to clamber up the treacherous slope.
“Gently, boys, gently,”
warned Throcker, as the men came on; he and Steering
could feel the rock upon which they lay vibrate; there
was a rending and splitting going on all through the
ledge. “Can you hold on a minute alone,
sir?” gasped Throcker suddenly. “I
have a bad heart and it’s going back on me,” he
fell weakly beside Steering.
“Yes, I can hold on alone.”
Steering’s face was in the loose crush, and
his lips were cut by the rock when he opened them,
so he stopped trying to talk.
“Get back, Mr. Throcker let
me get my hands down and help Mr. Steering.”
It was the girl’s voice, and the girl was beside
Steering, quiet and capable.
“Oh, you?” said Steering.
He had known all these seconds that he was doing this
for her, but the strain that he was on had somehow
pulled him beyond the comprehension of her as actual;
for the last ten seconds she had been rather a big
abstraction, a high principle of his soul, a good
desire in his heart. To see her there before him
was to see abstraction, principle, desire becoming
adequately incarnate. “No, you mustn’t
try to reach down here, your arms aren’t
long enough, the commotion on the edge
here is dangerous, if you will just put
something, your handkerchief, under my face where
the sharp little rocks are at it, ah, you
should not have done that!” she
had slipped her hands beneath his face, and the touch
of her fingers was like velvet as she worked away
the sticking, stinging bits of ore and rock that worried
him. He had not known how chief a part in his
sensation of discomfort those bits had played until
he could bury his face in the relief of her soft hands.
As a matter of fact, with those bits out of his cheeks, and
his face in her hands, he felt no great
discomfort at all. If it had not been for her
shivering sigh of relief he would have been sorry when
the miners drew Madeira up. Madeira had not spoken,
and he was purple as they carried him to a place of
safety some distance back on the ledge.
“He is just the sort of man
physically who ought not to be subjected to choking
experiences,” said Steering. One of the
miners had brought water, and Steering and Miss Madeira
were reviving Madeira with it. Madeira did not
seem to be unconscious, but his senses were obtunded,
and it was some minutes before he could sit up.
“God bless my soul! God
bless my soul!” he said, at last, and shivered.
Then he turned to Steering: “My boy, you
know how to hold on. I believe you’ve got
as much stick-to-it-iveness as I have.”
It was his supremest form of acknowledgment, and,
in making it, he made, too, an impression upon Steering
that he resented the circumstances that compelled him
to make it.
They got back to the upper air presently,
followed by a cheer from the mine force below.
The miners had watched Steering perform one of those
supernatural feats of strength and endurance that an
onlooker can never explain afterward. Usually
the performer knows that the thing was a matter of
motive and will, not muscle.
Up in the daylight again, Madeira
was quickly himself again. He resumed charge
of affairs in his comprehensive way, and though the
mine-boss, frightened and remorseful, was limp now,
all his enthusiasm gone, Madeira’s welled up
again strong within him. They went back to their
horses without loss of time, and, waving adieux to
Throcker and some of his men who had gathered about,
they were soon journeying back down the white road
toward Joplin. Miss Madeira’s hands were
in bad condition for driving, Steering thought, but
she had taken the reins just the same.
“We are all dilapidated for
the matter of that,” she said. “Father
is as grey-faced as a rat, your cheeks are all cut
and pricked my hands don’t count.”
Twilight was coming on and a full
moon was rising. The great sweep of flat stretched
out about them in a mesh of soft light. The ride
back was gay, and when they stopped at the house of
the Joplin man, who was their host, all three were
still in nervously high spirits. A negro servant
came out for the horses, and Steering helped Miss Madeira
to alight. The girl had drawn off her driving
gauntlets, and the ungloved hand that she gave him
was scratched and scarred across its brown back.
“Isn’t that shameful, and
you did it for me!” mourned Steering.
“Oh, if I could have done more!”
she cried breathlessly, “if I could do more, as
much as you have done for me! If I have not thanked
you, you know,” what she was saying
was fragmentary and confused, but her eyes were shining
sweetly upon him, “it’s because
I can’t. You must understand that.
I never can talk when I am busy feeling. How are
your shoulders?”
“I don’t know that I have
any,” replied Steering, with wretched prevarication.
“Come on, Honey, come on.”
Madeira was at the stone steps of the Joplin house,
and the girl took his arm and climbed the steps with
him. At the top Madeira turned back to Steering,
who was a step behind. “Well, old man,
let’s have it out now, before we go in and get
mixed up with these strangers. What about those
shares? Coming in with us, I reckon?” It
was like Madeira to select a position of advantage
like that, a higher place from which he could look
down and dominate, with his daughter beside him, and
it was like him to select a moment like that, a moment
when the three were close, on the very summit of their
friendship and sympathy. “We are to be
all together on that deal, aren’t we?”
Though the girl, her arm linked through
her father’s, was waiting for his answer, and
though Steering saw that she expected his acquiescence
as the right and natural thing, her influence upon
him, despite that, was all for the rejection of Madeira’s
proposition. She looked so young, so straight,
so honest, that, as an influence, she was ranged against
Madeira, even though, in her ignorance, she imagined
herself to be in harmony with him. Steering,
looking at her first and Madeira next, knew that she
really fashioned his answer, that it was really all
because of her that his words came, swiftly, earnestly:
“Don’t allot me any shares
at all, Mr. Madeira. I have decided not to go
into the company.”
Madeira emitted a breezy “All
right. God bless you, all right.” The
girl looked sorry and puzzled. Steering came
on up the steps behind them, with a sense of mingled
elation and sadness, and the three passed through
the door of the Joplin man’s house.