Late in June the vast northwestern
desert of wheat began to take on a tinge of gold,
lending an austere beauty to that endless, rolling,
smooth world of treeless hills, where miles of fallow
ground and miles of waving grain sloped up to the
far-separated homes of the heroic men who had conquered
over sage and sand.
These simple homes of farmers seemed
lost on an immensity of soft gray and golden billows
of land, insignificant dots here and there on distant
hills, so far apart that nature only seemed accountable
for those broad squares of alternate gold and brown,
extending on and on to the waving horizon-line.
A lonely, hard, heroic country, where flowers and fruit
were not, nor birds and brooks, nor green pastures.
Whirling strings of dust looped up over fallow ground,
the short, dry wheat lay back from the wind, the haze
in the distance was drab and smoky, heavy with substance.
A thousand hills lay bare to the sky,
and half of every hill was wheat and half was fallow
ground; and all of them, with the shallow valleys
between, seemed big and strange and isolated.
The beauty of them was austere, as if the hand of
man had been held back from making green his home
site, as if the immensity of the task had left no time
for youth and freshness. Years, long years, were
there in the round-hilled, many-furrowed gray old
earth. And the wheat looked a century old.
Here and there a straight, dusty road stretched from
hill to hill, becoming a thin white line, to disappear
in the distance. The sun shone hot, the wind
blew hard; and over the boundless undulating expanse
hovered a shadow that was neither hood of dust nor
hue of gold. It was not physical, but lonely,
waiting, prophetic, and weird. No wild desert
of wastelands, once the home of other races of man,
and now gone to decay and death, could have shown
so barren an acreage. Half of this wandering
patchwork of squares was earth, brown and gray, curried
and disked, and rolled and combed and harrowed, with
not a tiny leaf of green in all the miles. The
other half had only a faint golden promise of mellow
harvest; and at long distance it seemed to shimmer
and retreat under the hot sun. A singularly beautiful
effect of harmony lay in the long, slowly rising slopes,
in the rounded hills, in the endless curving lines
on all sides. The scene was heroic because of
the labor of horny hands; it was sublime because not
a hundred harvests, nor three generations of toiling
men, could ever rob nature of its limitless space
and scorching sun and sweeping dust, of its resistless
age-long creep back toward the desert that it had
been.
Here was grown the most bounteous,
the richest and finest wheat in all the world.
Strange and unfathomable that so much of the bread
of man, the staff of life, the hope of civilization
in this tragic year 1917, should come from a vast,
treeless, waterless, dreary desert!
This wonderful place was an immense
valley of considerable altitude called the Columbia
Basin, surrounded by the Cascade Mountains on the
west, the Coeur d’Alene and Bitter Root Mountains
on the east, the Okanozan range to the north, and
the Blue Mountains to the south. The valley floor
was basalt, from the lava flow of volcanoes in ages
past. The rainfall was slight except in the foot-hills
of the mountains. The Columbia River, making
a prodigious and meandering curve, bordered on three
sides what was known as the Bend country. South
of this vast area, across the range, began the fertile,
many-watered region that extended on down into verdant
Oregon. Among the desert hills of this Bend country,
near the center of the Basin, where the best wheat
was raised, lay widely separated little towns, the
names of which gave evidence of the mixed population.
It was, of course, an exceedingly prosperous country,
a fact manifest in the substantial little towns, if
not in the crude and unpretentious homes of the farmers.
The acreage of farms ran from a section, six hundred
and forty acres, up into the thousands.
Upon a morning in early July, exactly
three months after the United States had declared
war upon Germany, a sturdy young farmer strode with
darkly troubled face from the presence of his father.
At the end of a stormy scene he had promised his father
that he would abandon his desire to enlist in the
army.
Kurt Dorn walked away from the gray
old clapboard house, out to the fence, where he leaned
on the gate. He could see for miles in every
direction, and to the southward, away on a long yellow
slope, rose a stream of dust from a motor-car.
“Must be Anderson coming
to dun father,” muttered young Dorn.
This was the day, he remembered, when
the wealthy rancher of Ruxton was to look over old
Chris Dorn’s wheat-fields. Dorn owed thirty-thousand
dollars and interest for years, mostly to Anderson.
Kurt hated the debt and resented the visit, but he
could not help acknowledging that the rancher had
been lenient and kind. Long since Kurt had sorrowfully
realized that his father was illiterate, hard, grasping,
and growing worse with the burden of years.
“If we had rain now or
soon that section of Bluestem would square
father,” soliloquized young Dorn, as with keen
eyes he surveyed a vast field of wheat, short, smooth,
yellowing in the sun. But the cloudless sky,
the haze of heat rather betokened a continued drought.
There were reasons, indeed, for Dorn
to wear a dark and troubled face as he watched the
motor-car speed along ahead of its stream of dust,
pass out of sight under the hill, and soon reappear,
to turn off the main road and come toward the house.
It was a big, closed car, covered with dust.
The driver stopped it at the gate and got out.
“Is this Chris Dorn’s farm?” he
asked.
“Yes,” replied Kurt.
Whereupon the door of the car opened
and out stepped a short, broad man in a long linen
coat.
“Come out, Lenore, an’
shake off the dust,” he said, and he assisted
a young woman to step out. She also wore a long
linen coat, and a veil besides. The man removed
his coat and threw it into the car. Then he took
off his sombrero to beat the dust off of that.
“Phew! The Golden Valley
never seen dust like this in a million years!...
I’m chokin’ for water. An’ listen
to the car. She’s boilin’!”
Then, as he stepped toward Kurt, the
rancher showed himself to be a well-preserved man
of perhaps fifty-five, of powerful form beginning to
sag in the broad shoulders, his face bronzed by long
exposure to wind and sun. He had keen gray eyes,
and their look was that of a man used to dealing with
his kind and well disposed toward them.
“Hello! Are you young Dorn?” he asked.
“Yes, sir,” replied Kurt, stepping out.
“I’m Anderson, from Ruxton,
come to see your dad. This is my girl Lenore.”
Kurt acknowledged the slight bow from
the veiled young woman, and then, hesitating, he added,
“Won’t you come in?”
“No, not yet. I’m
chokin’ for air an’ water. Bring us
a drink,” replied Anderson.
Kurt hurried away to get a bucket
and tin cup. As he drew water from the well he
was thinking rather vaguely that it was somehow embarrassing the
fact of Mr. Anderson being accompanied by his daughter.
Kurt was afraid of his father. But then, what
did it matter? When he returned to the yard he
found the rancher sitting in the shade of one of the
few apple-trees, and the young lady was standing near,
in the act of removing bonnet and veil. She had
thrown the linen coat over the seat of an old wagon-bed
that lay near.
“Good water is scarce here,
but I’m glad we have some,” said Kurt;
then as he set down the bucket and offered a brimming
cupful to the girl he saw her face, and his eyes met
hers. He dropped the cup and stared. Then
hurriedly, with flushing face, he bent over to recover
and refill it.
“Ex-excuse me. I’m clumsy,”
he managed to say, and as he handed the cup to her
he averted his gaze. For more than a year the
memory of this very girl had haunted him. He
had seen her twice the first time at the
close of his one year of college at the University
of California, and the second time on the street in
Spokane. In a glance he had recognized the strong,
lithe figure, the sunny hair, the rare golden tint
of her complexion, the blue eyes, warm and direct.
And he had sustained a shock which momentarily confused
him.
“Good water, hey?” dissented
Anderson, after drinking a second cup. “Boy
that’s wet, but it ain’t water to drink.
Come down in the foot-hills an’ I’ll show
you. My ranch ’s called ‘Many Waters,’
an’ you can’t keep your feet dry.”
“I wish we had some of it here,”
replied Kurt, wistfully, and he waved a hand at the
broad, swelling slopes. The warm breath that blew
in from the wheatlands felt dry and smelled dry.
“You’re in for a dry spell?”
inquired Anderson, with interest that was keen, and
kindly as well.
“Father says so. And I
fear it, too for he never makes a mistake
in weather or crops.”
“A hot, dry spell!... This
summer?... Hum!... Boy, do you know that
wheat is the most important thing in the world to-day?”
“You mean on account of the
war,” replied Kurt. “Yes, I know.
But father doesn’t see that. All he sees
is if we have rain we’ll have bumper
crops. That big field there would be a record at
war prices.... And he wouldn’t be ruined!”
“Ruined?... Oh, he means
I’d close on him.... Hum!... Say, what
do you see in a big wheat yield if it rains?”
“Mr. Anderson, I’d like
to see our debt paid, but I’m thinking most of
wheat for starving peoples. I I’ve
studied this wheat question. It’s the biggest
question in this war.”
Kurt had forgotten the girl and was
unaware of her eyes bent steadily upon him. Anderson
had roused to the interest of wheat, and to a deeper
study of the young man.
“Say, Dorn, how old are you?” he asked.
“Twenty-four. And Kurt’s my first
name,” was the reply.
“Will this farm fall to you?”
“Yes, if my father does not lose it.”
“Hum!... Old Dorn won’t
lose it, never fear. He raises the best wheat
in this section.”
“But father never owned the
land. We have had three bad years. If the
wheat fails this summer we lose the land,
that’s all.”
“Are you an American?”
queried Anderson, slowly, as if treading on dangerous
ground.
“I am,” snapped Kurt.
“My mother was American. She’s dead.
Father is German. He’s old. He’s
rabid since the President declared war. He’ll
never change.”
“That’s hell. What
‘re you goin’ to do if your country calls
you?”
“Go!” replied Kurt, with
flashing eyes. “I wanted to enlist.
Father and I quarreled over that until I had to give
in. He’s hard he’s impossible....
I’ll wait for the draft and hope I’m called.”
“Boy, it’s that spirit
Germany’s roused, an’ the best I can say
is, God help her!... Have you a brother?”
“No. I’m all father has.”
“Well, it makes a tough place
for him, an’ you, too. Humor him. He’s
old. An’ when you’re called go
an’ fight. You’ll come back.”
“If I only knew that it wouldn’t
be so hard.”
“Hard? It sure is hard.
But it’ll be the makin’ of a great country.
It’ll weed out the riffraff.... See here,
Kurt, I’m goin’ to give you a hunch.
Have you had any dealin’s with the I.W.W.?”
“Yes, last harvest we had trouble,
but nothing serious. When I was in Spokane last
month I heard a good deal. Strangers have approached
us here, too mostly aliens. I have
no use for them, but they always get father’s
ear. And now!... To tell the truth, I’m
worried.”
“Boy, you need to be,”
replied Anderson, earnestly. “We’re
all worried. I’m goin’ to let you
read over the laws of that I.W.W. organization.
You’re to keep mum now, mind you. I belong
to the Chamber of Commerce in Spokane. Somebody
got hold of these by-laws of this so-called labor
union. We’ve had copies made, an’
every honest farmer in the Northwest is goin’
to read them. But carryin’ one around is
dangerous, I reckon, these days. Here.”
Anderson hesitated a moment, peered
cautiously around, and then, slipping folded sheets
of paper from his inside coat pocket, he evidently
made ready to hand them to Kurt.
“Lenore, where’s the driver?” he
asked.
“He’s under the car,” replied the
girl
Kurt thrilled at the soft sound of
her voice. It was something to have been haunted
by a girl’s face for a year and then suddenly
hear her voice.
“He’s new to me that
driver an’ I ain’t trustin’
any new men these days,” went on Anderson.
“Here now, Dorn. Read that. An’
if you don’t get red-headed ”
Without finishing his last muttered
remark, he opened the sheets of manuscript and spread
them out to the young man.
Curiously, and with a little rush
of excitement, Kurt began to read. The very first
rule of the I.W.W. aimed to abolish capital. Kurt
read on with slowly growing amaze, consternation,
and anger. When he had finished, his look, without
speech, was a question Anderson hastened to answer.
“It’s straight goods,”
he declared. “Them’s the sure-enough
rules of that gang. We made certain before we
acted. Now how do they strike you?”
“Why, that’s no labor
union!” replied Kurt, hotly. “They’re
outlaws, thieves, blackmailers, pirates. I I
don’t know what!”
“Dorn, we’re up against
a bad outfit an’ the Northwest will see hell
this summer. There’s trouble in Montana
and Idaho. Strangers are driftin’ into
Washington from all over. We must organize to
meet them to prevent them gettin’
a hold out here. It’s a labor union, mostly
aliens, with dishonest an’ unscrupulous leaders,
some of them Americans. They aim to take advantage
of the war situation. In the newspapers they
rave about shorter hours, more pay, acknowledgment
of the union. But any fool would see, if he read
them laws I showed you, that this I.W.W. is not straight.”
“Mr. Anderson, what steps have
you taken down in your country?” queried Kurt.
“So far all I’ve done
was to hire my hands for a year, give them high wages,
an’ caution them when strangers come round to
feed them an’ be civil an’ send them on.”
“But we can’t do that
up here in the Bend,” said Dorn, seriously.
“We need, say, a hundred thousand men in harvest-time,
and not ten thousand all the rest of the year.”
“Sure you can’t.
But you’ll have to organize somethin’.
Up here in this desert you could have a heap of trouble
if that outfit got here strong enough. You’d
better tell every farmer you can trust about this I.W.W.”
“I’ve only one American
neighbor, and he lives six miles from here,”
replied Dorn. “Olsen over there is a Swede,
and not a naturalized citizen, but I believe he’s
for the U.S. And there’s ”
“Dad,” interrupted the
girl, “I believe our driver is listening to your
very uninteresting conversation.”
She spoke demurely, with laughter
in her low voice. It made Dorn dare to look at
her, and he met a blue blaze that was instantly averted.
Anderson growled, evidently some very
hard names, under his breath; his look just then was
full of characteristic Western spirit. Then he
got up.
“Lenore, I reckon your talk
’ll be more interesting than mine,” he
said, dryly. “I’ll go see Dorn an’
get this business over.”
“I’d rather go with you,”
hurriedly replied Kurt; and then, as though realizing
a seeming discourtesy in his words, his face flamed,
and he stammered: “I I don’t
mean that. But father is in bad mood. We
just quarreled. I told you about
the war. And Mr. Anderson, I’m I’m
a little afraid he’ll ”
“Well, son, I’m not afraid,”
interrupted the rancher. “I’ll beard
the old lion in his den. You talk to Lenore.”
“Please don’t speak of the war,”
said Kurt, appealingly.
“Not a word unless he starts
roarin’ at Uncle Sam,” declared Anderson,
with a twinkle in his eyes, and turned toward the house.
“He’ll roar, all right,”
said Kurt, almost with a groan. He knew what an
ordeal awaited the rancher, and he hated the fact that
it could not be avoided. Then Kurt was confused,
astounded, infuriated with himself over a situation
he had not brought about and could scarcely realize.
He became conscious of pride and shame, and something
as black and hopeless as despair.
“Haven’t I seen you before?”
asked the girl.
The query surprised and thrilled Kurt out of his self-centered
thought.
“I don’t know. Have
you? Where?” he answered, facing her.
It was a relief to find that she still averted her
face.
“At Berkeley, in California,
the first time, and the second at Spokane, in front
of the Davenport,” she replied.
“First and second?...
You you remembered both times!” he
burst out, incredulously.
“Yes. I don’t see
how I could have helped remembering.” Her
laugh was low, musical, a little hurried, yet cool.
Dorn was not familiar with girls.
He had worked hard all his life, there among those
desert hills, and during the few years his father had
allowed him for education. He knew wheat, but
nothing of the eternal feminine. So it was impossible
for him to grasp that this girl was not wholly at
her ease. Her words and the cool little laugh
suddenly brought home to Kurt the immeasurable distance
between him and a daughter of one of the richest ranchers
in Washington.
“You mean I I was
impertinent,” he began, struggling between shame
and pride. “I I stared at you....
Oh, I must have been rude.... But, Miss Anderson,
I I didn’t mean to be. I didn’t
think you saw me at all. I don’t
know what made me do that. It never happened before.
I beg your pardon.”
A subtle indefinable change, perceptible
to Dorn, even in his confused state, came over the
girl.
“I did not say you were impertinent,”
she returned. “I remembered seeing you notice
me, that is all.”
Self-possessed, aloof, and kind, Miss
Anderson now became an impenetrable mystery to Dorn.
But that only accentuated the distance she had intimated
lay between them. Her kindness stung him to recover
his composure. He wished she had not been kind.
What a singular chance that had brought her here to
his home the daughter of a man who came
to demand a long-unpaid debt! What a dispelling
of the vague thing that had been only a dream!
Dorn gazed away across the yellowing hills to the dim
blue of the mountains where rolled the Oregon.
Despite the color, it was gray like his
future.
“I heard you tell father you
had studied wheat,” said the girl, presently,
evidently trying to make conversation.
“Yes, all my life,” replied
Kurt. “My study has mostly been under my
father. Look at my hands.” He held
out big, strong hands, scarred and knotted, with horny
palms uppermost, and he laughed. “I can
be proud of them, Miss Anderson.... But I had
a splendid year in California at the university and
I graduated from the Washington State Agricultural
College.”
“You love wheat the
raising of it, I mean?” she inquired.
“It must be that I do, though
I never had such a thought. Wheat is so wonderful.
No one can guess who does not know it!... The
clean, plump grain, the sowing on fallow ground, the
long wait, the first tender green, and the change
day by day to the deep waving fields of gold then
the harvest, hot, noisy, smoky, full of dust and chaff,
and the great combine-harvesters with thirty-four
horses. Oh! I guess I do love it all....
I worked in a Spokane flour-mill, too, just to learn
how flour is made. There is nothing in the world
so white, so clean, so pure as flour made from the
wheat of these hills!”
“Next you’ll be telling
me that you can bake bread,” she rejoined, and
her laugh was low and sweet. Her eyes shone with
soft blue gleams.
“Indeed I can! I bake all
the bread we use,” he said, stoutly. “And
I flatter myself I can beat any girl you know.”
“You can beat mine, I’m
sure. Before I went to college I did pretty well.
But I learned too much there. Now my mother and
sisters, and brother Jim, all the family except dad,
make fun of my bread.”
“You have a brother? How old is he?”
“One brother Jim,
we call him. He he is just past twenty-one.”
She faltered the last few words.
Kurt felt on common ground with her
then. The sudden break in her voice, the change
in her face, the shadowing of the blue eyes these
were eloquent.
“Oh, it’s horrible this need
of war!” she exclaimed.
“Yes,” he replied, simply. “But
maybe your brother will not be called.”
“Called! Why, he refused
to wait for the draft! He went and enlisted.
Dad patted him on the back.... If anything happens
to him it’ll kill my mother. Jim is her
idol. It’d break my heart.... Oh, I
hate the very name of Germans!”
“My father is German,”
said Kurt. “He’s been fifty years
in America eighteen years here on this
farm. He always hated England. Now he’s
bitter against America.... I can see a side you
can’t see. But I don’t blame you for
what you said.”
“Forgive me. I can’t
conceive of meaning that against any one who’s
lived here so long.... Oh, it must be hard for
you.”
“I’ll let my father think
I’m forced to join the army. But I’m
going to fight against his people. We are a house
divided against itself.”
“Oh, what a pity!” The
girl sighed and her eyes were dark with brooding sorrow.
A step sounded behind them. Mr.
Anderson appeared, sombrero off, mopping a very red
face. His eyes gleamed, with angry glints; his
mouth and chin were working. He flopped down
with a great, explosive breath.
“Kurt, your old man is a a son
of a gun!” he exclaimed, vociferously; manifestly,
liberation of speech was a relief.
The young man nodded seriously and
knowingly. “I hope, sir he he ”
“He did you just
bet your life! He called me a lot in German, but
I know cuss words when I hear them. I tried to
reason with him told him I wanted my money was
here to help him get that money off the farm, some
way or other. An’ he swore I was a capitalist an
enemy to labor an’ the Northwest that
I an’ my kind had caused the war.”
Kurt gazed gravely into the disturbed
face of the rancher. Miss Anderson had wide-open
eyes of wonder.
“Sure I could have stood all
that,” went on Anderson, fuming. “But
he ordered me out of the house. I got mad an’
wouldn’t go. Then by George!
he pulled my nose an’ called me a bloody Englishman!”
Kurt groaned in the disgrace of the
moment. But, amazingly, Miss Anderson burst into
a silvery peal of laughter.
“Oh, dad!... that’s just
too good for anything! You
met your match at last.... You know
you always boasted of your drop of English
blood.... And you’re sensitive about
your big nose!”
“He must be over seventy,”
growled Anderson, as if seeking for some excuse to
palliate his restraint. “I’m mad but
it was funny.” The working of his face
finally set in the huge wrinkles of a laugh.
Young Dorn struggled to repress his
own mirth, but unguardedly he happened to meet the
dancing blue eyes of the girl, merry, provocative,
full of youth and fun, and that was too much for him.
He laughed with them.
“The joke’s on me,”
said Anderson. “An’ I can take one....
Now, young man, I think I gathered from your amiable
dad that if the crop of wheat was full I’d get
my money. Otherwise I could take over the land.
For my part, I’d never do that, but the others
interested might do it, even for the little money
involved. I tried to buy them out so I’d
have the whole mortgage. They would not sell.”
“Mr. Anderson, you’re
a square man, and I’ll do ”
declared Kurt.
“Come out an’ show me
the wheat,” interrupted Anderson. “Lenore,
do you want to go with us?”
“I do,” replied the daughter,
and she took up her hat to put it on.
Kurt led them through the yard, out
past the old barn, to the edge of the open slope where
the wheat stretched away, down and up, as far as the
eye could see.