Golden Valley was the Garden of Eden
of the Northwest. The southern slope rose to
the Blue Mountains, whence flowed down the innumerable
brooks that, uniting to form streams and rivers, abundantly
watered the valley.
The black reaches of timber extended
down to the grazing-uplands, and these bordered on
the sloping golden wheat-fields, which in turn contrasted
so vividly with the lower green alfalfa-pastures; then
came the orchards with their ruddy, mellow fruit,
and lastly the bottom-lands where the vegetable-gardens
attested to the wonderful richness of the soil.
From the mountain-side the valley seemed a series of
colored benches, stepping down, black to gray, and
gray to gold, and gold to green with purple tinge,
and on to the perfectly ordered, many-hued floor with
its innumerable winding, tree-bordered streams glinting
in the sunlight.
The extremes of heat and cold never
visited Golden Valley. Spokane and the Bend country,
just now sweltering in a torrid zone, might as well
have been in the Sahara, for all the effect it had
on this garden spot of all the Inland Empire.
It was hot in the valley, but not unpleasant.
In fact, the greatest charm in this secluded vale was
its pleasant climate all the year round. No summer
cyclones, no winter blizzards, no cloudbursts or bad
thunderstorms. It was a country that, once lived
in, could never be left.
There were no poor inhabitants in
that great area of twenty-five hundred miles; and
there were many who were rich. Prosperous little
towns dotted the valley floor; and the many smooth,
dusty, much-used roads all led to Ruxton, a wealthy
and fine city.
Anderson, the rancher, had driven
his car to Spokane. Upon his return he had with
him a detective, whom he expected to use in the I.W.W.
investigations, and a neighbor rancher. They had
left Spokane early and had endured almost insupportable
dust and heat. A welcome change began as they
slid down from the bare desert into the valley; and
once across the Copper River, Anderson began to breathe
freer and to feel he was nearing home.
“God’s country!”
he said, as he struck the first low swell of rising
land, where a cool wind from off the wooded and watered
hills greeted his face. Dust there still was,
but it seemed a different kind and smelled of apple-orchards
and alfalfa-fields. Here were hard, smooth roads,
and Anderson sped his car miles and miles through a
country that was a verdant fragrant bower, and across
bright, shady streams and by white little hamlets.
At Huntington he dropped his neighbor
rancher, and also the detective, Hall, who was to
go disguised into the districts overrun by the I.W.W.
A further run of forty miles put him on his own property.
Anderson owned a string of farms and
ranches extending from the bottom-lands to the timber-line
of the mountains. They represented his life of
hard work and fair dealing. Many of these orchard
and vegetable lands he had tenant farmers work on
shares. The uplands or wheat and grass he operated
himself. As he had accumulated property he had
changed his place of residence from time to time,
at last to build a beautiful and permanent home farther
up on the valley slope than any of the others.
It was a modern house, white, with
a red roof. Situated upon a high level bench,
with the waving gold fields sloping up from it and
the green squares of alfalfa and orchards below, it
appeared a landmark from all around, and could be
plainly seen from Vale, the nearest little town, five
miles away.
Anderson had always loved the open,
and he wanted a place where he could see the sun rise
over the distant valley gateway, and watch it set
beyond the bold black range in the west. He could
sit on his front porch, wide and shady, and look down
over two thousand acres of his own land. But
from the back porch no eye could have encompassed the
limit of his broad, swelling slopes of grain and grass.
From the main road he drove up to
the right of the house, where, under a dip of wooded
slope, clustered barns, sheds, corrals, granaries,
engine and machinery houses, a store, and the homes
of hired men a little village in itself.
The sounds he heard were a welcome
home the rush of swift water not twenty
yards from where he stopped the car in the big courtyard,
the pound of hoofs on the barn floor, the shrill whistle
of a stallion that saw and recognized him, the drawling
laugh of his cowboys and the clink of their spurs
as they became aware of his return.
Nash, the suspected driver, was among
those who hurried to meet the car.
Anderson’s keen, covert glance
made note of the driver’s worried and anxious
face.
“Nash, she’ll need a lookin’
over,” he said, as he uncovered bundles in the
back seat and lifted them out.
“All right, sir,” replied
Nash, eagerly. A note of ended strain was significant
in his voice.
“Here, you Jake,” cheerily
called Anderson to a raw-boned, gaunt-faced fellow
who wore the garb of a cowboy.
“Boss, I’m powerful glad
to see you home,” replied Jake, as he received
bundle after bundle until he was loaded down.
Then he grinned. “Mebbe you want a pack-boss.”
“You’re hoss enough for
me. Come on,” he said, and, waving the other
men aside, he turned toward the green, shady hill
above which the red and white of the house just showed.
A bridge crossed the rushing stream.
Here Jake dropped some of the bundles, and Anderson
recovered them. As he straightened up he looked
searchingly at the cowboy. Jake’s yellow-gray
eyes returned the gaze. And that exchange showed
these two of the same breed and sure of each other.
“Nawthin’ come off, boss,”
he drawled, “but I’m glad you’re
home.”
“Did Nash leave the place?” queried Anderson.
“Twice, at night, an’
he was gone long. I didn’t foller him because
I seen he didn’t take no luggage, an’
thet boy has some sporty clothes. He was sure
comin’ back.”
“Any sign of his pard that Glidden?”
“Nope. But there’s been more’n
one new feller snookin’ round.”
“Have you heard from any of the boys with the
cattle?”
“Yep. Bill Weeks rode down.
He said a bunch of I.W.W.’s were campin’
above Blue Spring. Thet means they’ve moved
on down to the edge of the timber an’ oncomfortable
near our wheat. Bill says they’re killin’
our stock fer meat.”
“Hum!... How many in the
gang?” inquired Anderson, darkly. His early
dealings with outlaw rustlers had not left him favorably
inclined toward losing a single steer.
“Wal, I reckon we can’t
say. Mebbe five hundred, countin’ all along
the valley on this side. Then we hear there’s
more on the other... Boss, if they git ugly we’re
goin’ to lose stock, wheat, an’ mebbe some
blood.”
“So many as that!” ejaculated the rancher,
in amaze.
“They come an’ go, an’ lately they’re
most comin’,” replied Jake.
“When do we begin cuttin’ grain?”
“I reckon to-morrow. Adams
didn’t want to start till you got back.
It’ll be barley an’ oats fer a few
days, an’ then the wheat if we can
git the men.”
“An’ has Adams hired any?”
“Yes, a matter of twenty or
so. They swore they wasn’t I.W.W.’s,
but Adams says, an’ so do I, thet some of them
are men who first claimed to our old hands thet they
did belong to the I.W.W.”
“An’ so we’ve got
to take a chance if we’re goin’ to harvest
two thousand acres of wheat?”
“I reckon, boss.”
“Any reports from Ruxton way?”
“Wal, yes. But I reckon
you’d better git your supper ’fore I tell
you, boss.”
“Jake, you said nothin’ had come off.”
“Wal, nawthin’ has around
here. Come on now, boss. Miss Lenore says
I was to keep my mouth shut.”
“Jake, who’s your boss? Me or Lenore?”
“Wal, you air. But I ain’t disobeyin’
Miss Lenore.”
Anderson walked the rest of the way
up the shady path to the house without saying any
more to Jake. The beautiful white house stood
clear of the grove, bright in the rays of the setting
sun. A barking of dogs greeted Anderson, and
then the pattering of feet. His daughters appeared
on the porch. Kathleen, who was ten, made a dive
for him, and Rose, who was fourteen, came flying after
her. Both girls were screaming joyously.
Their sunny hair danced. Lenore waited for him
at the step, and as he mounted the porch, burdened
by the three girls, his anxious, sadly smiling wife
came out to make perfect the welcome home. No not
perfect, for Anderson’s joy held a bitter drop,
the absence of his only son!
“Oh, dad, what-all did you fetch
me?” cried Kathleen, and she deserted her father
for the bundle-laden Jake.
“And me!” echoed Rose.
Even Lenore, in the happiness of her
father’s return, was not proof against the wonder
and promise of those many bundles.
They all went within, through a hall
to a great, cozy living-room. Mrs. Anderson’s
very first words, after her welcoming smile, were a
half-faltered:
“Any news of Jim?”
“Why yes,” replied Anderson,
hesitatingly.
Suddenly the three sisters were silent.
How closely they resembled one another then Lenore,
a budding woman; Rose, a budding girl; and Kathleen,
a rosy, radiant child! Lenore lost a little of
her bloom.
“What news, father?” she asked.
“Haven’t you heard from him?” returned
Anderson.
“Not for a whole week.
He wrote the day he reached Spokane. But then
he hardly knew anything except that he’d enlisted.”
“I’m sure glad Jim didn’t
wait for the draft,” replied the father.
“Well, mother an’ girls, Jim was gone when
I got to Spokane. All I heard was that he was
well when he left for Frisco an’ strong for the
aviation corps.”
“Then he means to to
be an aviator,” said Lenore, with quivering lips.
“Sure, if he can get in.
An’ he’s wise. Jim knows engines.
He has a knack for machinery. An’ nerve!
No boy ever had more. He’ll make a crack
flier.”
“But the danger!”
whispered the boy’s mother, with a shudder.
“I reckon there’ll be
a little danger, mother,” replied Anderson,
cheerfully. “We’ve got to take our
chance on Jim. There’s one sure bet.
If he had stayed home he’d been fightin’
I.W.W.’s!”
That trying moment passed. Mrs.
Anderson said that she would see to supper being put
on the table at once. The younger girls began
untying the bundles. Lenore studied her father’s
face a moment.
“Jake, you run along,”
she said to the waiting cowboy. “Wait till
after supper before you worry father.”
“I’ll do thet, Miss Lenore,”
drawled Jake, “an’ if he wants worryin’
he’ll hev to look me up.”
“Lass, I’m only tired,
not worried,” replied Anderson, as Jake shuffled
out with jingling spurs.
“Did anything serious happen
in Spokane?” she asked anxiously.
“No. But Spokane men are
alive to serious trouble ahead,” replied her
father. “I spoke to the Chamber of Commerce sure
exploded a bomb in that camp. Then I had conferences
with a good many different men. Fact is they
ran me pretty hard. Couldn’t have slept
much, anyhow, in that heat. Lass, this is the
place to live!... I’d rather die here than
live in Spokane, in summer.”
“Did you see the Governor?”
“Yes, an’ he wasn’t
as anxious about the Golden Valley as the Bend country.
He’s right, too. We’re old Westerners
here. We can handle trouble. But they’re
not Americans up there in the Bend.”
“Father, we met one American,” said Lenore,
dreamily.
“By George! we did!...
An’ that reminds me. There was a government
official from Washington, come out to Spokane to investigate
conditions. I forget his name. He asked
to meet me an’ he was curious about the Bend its
loyalty to the U.S. I told him all I knew an’
what I thought. An’ then he said he was
goin’ to motor through that wheat-belt an’
talk to what Americans he could find, an’ impress
upon them that they could do as much as soldiers to
win the war. Wheat bread that’s
our great gun in this war, Lenore!... I knew
this, but I was made pretty blamed sober by that government
man. I told him by all means to go to Palmer
an’ to have a talk with young Dorn. I sure
gave that boy a good word. Poor lad! He’s
true blue. An’ to think of him with that
old German devil. Old Dorn has always had a hard
name. An’ this war has brought out the
German cussedness.”
“Father, I’m glad you
spoke well of the young man,” said Lenore, still
dreamily.
“Hum! You never told me
what you thought,” replied her father, with a
quick glance of inquiry at her. Lenore was gazing
out of the window, away across the wheat-fields and
the range. Anderson watched her a moment, and
then resumed: “If I can get away I’m
goin’ to drive up to see Dorn again pretty soon.
Do you want to go?”
Lenore gave a little start, as if
the question had surprised her.
“I I hardly think so,” she
replied.
“It’s just as well,”
he said. “That’ll be a hard ride....
Guess I’ll clean up a little for supper.”
Anderson left the room, and, while
Kathleen and Rose gleefully squabbled over the bundles,
Lenore continued to gaze dreamily out of the window.
That night Lenore went early to her
room, despite the presence of some young people from
a neighboring village. She locked her door and
sat in the dark beside her open window.
An early moon silvered the long slopes
of wheat and made the alfalfa squares seem black.
A cool, faint, sweet breeze fanned her cheek.
She could smell the fragrance of apples, of new-mown
hay, and she could hear the low murmur of running
water. A hound bayed off somewhere in the fields.
There was no other sound. It was a quiet, beautiful,
pastoral scene. But somehow it did not comfort
Lenore.
She seemed to doubt the sincerity
of what she saw there and loved so well. Moon-blanched
and serene, lonely and silent, beautiful and promising,
the wide acres of “Many Waters,” and the
silver slopes and dark mountains beyond, did not tell
the truth. ’Way over the dark ranges a
hideous war had stretched out a red hand to her country.
Her only brother had left his home to fight, and there
was no telling if he would ever come back. Evil
forces were at work out there in the moonlight.
There had come a time for her to be thoughtful.
Her father’s asking her to ride
to the Bend country had caused some strange little
shock of surprise. Lenore had dreamed without
thinking. Here in the darkness and silence, watching
the crescent moon slowly sink, she did think.
And it was to learn that she remembered singularly
well the first time she had seen young Dorn, and still
more vividly the second time, but the third time seemed
both clear and vague. Enough young men had been
smitten with Lenore to enable her to gauge the symptoms
of these easy-come, easy-go attractions. In fact,
they rather repelled her. But she had found Dorn’s
manner striking, confusing, and unforgettable.
And why that should be so interested her intelligence.
It was confusing to discover that
she could not lay it to the sympathy she had felt
for an American boy in a difficult position, because
she had often thought of him long before she had any
idea who he was or where he lived.
In the very first place, he had been
unforgettable for two reasons because he
had been so struck at sight of her that he had gazed
unconsciously, with a glow on his face and a radiance
in his eye, as of a young poet spellbound at an inspiration;
and because he seemed the physical type of young man
she had idealized a strong, lithe-limbed,
blond giant, with a handsome, frank face, clear-cut
and smooth, ruddy-cheeked and blue-eyed.
Only after meeting him out there in
the desert of wheat had she felt sympathy for him.
And now with intelligence and a woman’s intuition,
barring the old, insidious, dreamy mood, Lenore went
over in retrospect all she could remember of that
meeting. And the truth made her sharply catch
her breath. Dorn had fallen in love with her.
Intuition declared that, while her intelligence repudiated
it. Stranger than all was the thrill which began
somewhere in the unknown depths of her and mounted,
to leave her tingling all over. She had told her
father that she did not want to ride to the Bend country.
But she did want to go! And that thought, flashing
up, would not be denied. To want to meet a strange
young man again was absolutely a new and irritating
discovery for Lenore. It mystified her, because
she had not had time to like Dorn. Liking an
acquaintance had nothing to do with the fact.
And that stunned her.
“Could it be love
at first sight?” she whispered, incredulously,
as she stared out over the shadowing fields.
“For me? Why, how absurd impossible!...
I I only remembered him a big
handsome boy with blazing eyes.... And now I’m
sorry for him!”
To whisper her amaze and doubt and
consternation only augmented the instinctive recurring
emotion. She felt something she could not explain.
And that something was scarcely owing to this young
man’s pitiful position between duty to his father
and love for his country. It had to do with his
blazing eyes; intangible, dreamlike perceptions of
him as not real, of vague sweet fancies that retreated
before her introspective questioning. What alarmed
Lenore was a tendency of her mind to shirk this revealing
analysis. Never before had she been afraid to
look into herself. But now she was finding unplumbed
wells of feeling, secret chambers of dreams into which
she had never let the light, strange instinctive activities,
more physical than mental. When in her life before
had she experienced a nameless palpitation of
her heart?
Long she sat there, staring out into
the night. And the change in the aspect of the
broad spaces, now dark and impenetrable and mysterious,
seemed like the change in the knowledge of herself.
Once she had flattered herself that she was an inch
of crystal water; now she seemed a complex, aloof,
and contrary creature, almost on the verge of tumultuous
emotions.
She said her prayers that night, a
girlish habit resumed since her brother had declared
his intention of enlisting in the army. And to
that old prayer, which her mother had prayed before
her, she added an appeal of her own. Strange
that young Dorn’s face should flash out of gloom!
It was there, and her brother’s was fading.
“I wonder will he
and Jim meet over there on the
battle-field!” she whispered. She hoped
they would. Like tigers those boys would fight
the Germans. Her heart beat high. Then a
cold wind seemed to blow over her. It had a sickening
weight. If that icy and somber wind could have
been traced to its source, then the mystery of life
would have been clear. But that source was the
cause of war, as its effect was the horror of women.
A hideous and monstrous thing existed out there in
the darkness. Lenore passionately loved her brother,
and this black thing had taken him away. Why
could not women, who suffered most, have some word
in the regulation of events? If women could help
govern the world there would be no wars.
At last encroaching drowsiness dulled
the poignancy of her feelings and she sank to sleep.