Singing of birds at her window awakened
Lenore. The dawn streamed in bright and sweetly
fragrant. The wheat-fields seemed a rosy gold,
and all that open slope called to her thrillingly
of the beauty of the world and the happiness of youth.
It was not possible to be morbid at dawn. “I
hear! I hear!” she whispered. “From
a thousand slopes far and wide!”
At the breakfast-table, when there
came opportunity, she looked up serenely and said,
“Father, on second thought I will go the Bend,
thank you!”
Anderson laid down his knife and fork
and his eyes opened wide in surprise. “Changed
your mind!” he exclaimed.
“That’s a privilege I
have, you know,” she replied, calmly.
Mrs. Anderson appeared more anxious
than surprised. “Daughter, don’t go.
That will be a fearful ride.”
“Hum! Sure glad to have
you, lass,” added Anderson, with his keen eyes
on her.
“Let me go, too,” begged Rose.
Kathleen was solemnly gazing at Lenore,
with the wise, penetrating eyes of extreme youth.
“Lenore, I’ll bet you’ve
got a new beau up there,” she declared.
Lenore flushed scarlet. She was
less angry with her little sister than with the incomprehensible
fact of a playful word bringing the blood stingingly
to her neck and face.
“Kitty, you forget your manners,” she
said, sharply.
“Kit is fresh. She’s an awful child,”
added Rose, with a superior air.
“I didn’t say a thing,”
cried Kathleen, hotly. “Lenore, if it isn’t
true, why’d you blush so red?”
“Hush, you silly children!” ordered the
mother, reprovingly.
Lenore was glad to finish that meal
and to get outdoors. She could smile now at that
shrewd and terrible Kitty, but recollection of her
father’s keen eyes was confusing. Lenore
felt there was really nothing to blush for; still,
she could scarcely tell her father that upon awakening
this morning she had found her mind made up that
only by going to the Bend country could she determine
the true state of her feelings. She simply dared
not accuse herself of being in unusually radiant spirits
because she was going to undertake a long, hard ride
into a barren, desert country.
The grave and thoughtful mood of last
night had gone with her slumbers. Often Lenore
had found problems decided for her while she slept.
On this fresh, sweet summer morning, with the sun
bright and warm, presaging a hot and glorious day,
Lenore wanted to run with the winds, to wade through
the alfalfa, to watch with strange and renewed pleasure
the waves of shadow as they went over the wheat.
All her life she had known and loved the fields of
waving gold. But they had never been to her what
they had become overnight. Perhaps this was because
it had been said that the issue of the great war,
the salvation of the world, and its happiness, its
hope, depended upon the millions of broad acres of
golden grain. Bread was the staff of life.
Lenore felt that she was changing and growing.
If anything should happen to her brother Jim she would
be heiress to thousands of acres of wheat. A
pang shot through her heart. She had to drive
the cold thought away. And she must learn must
know the bigness of this question. The women
of the country would be called upon to help, to do
their share.
She ran down through the grove and
across the bridge, coming abruptly upon Nash, her
father’s driver. He had the car out.
“Good morning,” he said, with a smile,
doffing his cap.
Lenore returned his greeting and asked
if her father intended to go anywhere.
“No. I’m taking telegrams to Huntington.”
“Telegrams? What’s the matter with
the ’phone?” she queried.
“Wire was cut yesterday.”
“By I.W.W. men?”
“So your father says. I don’t know.”
“Something ought to be done to those men,”
said Lenore, severely.
Nash was a dark-browed, heavy-jawed
young man, with light eyes and hair. He appeared
to be intelligent and had some breeding, but his manner
when alone with Lenore he had driven her
to town several times was not the same
as when her father was present. Lenore had not
bothered her mind about it. But to-day the look
in his eyes was offensive to her.
“Between you and me, Lenore,
I’ve sympathy for those poor devils,” he
said.
Lenore drew back rather haughtily
at this familiar use of her first name. “It
doesn’t concern me,” she said, coldly and
turned away.
“Won’t you ride along
with me? I’m driving around for the mail,”
he called after her.
“No,” returned Lenore,
shortly, and hurried on out of earshot. The impertinence
of the fellow!
“Mawnin’, Miss Lenore!”
drawled a cheery voice. The voice and the jingle
of spurs behind her told Lenore of the presence of
the best liked of all her father’s men.
“Good morning, Jake! Where’s my dad?”
“Wal, he’s with Adams,
an’ I wouldn’t be Adams for no money,”
replied the cowboy.
“Neither would I,” laughed Lenore.
“Reckon you ain’t ridin’
this mawnin’. You sure look powerful fine,
Miss Lenore, but you can’t ride in thet dress.”
“Jake, nothing but an aeroplane would satisfy
me to-day.”
“Want to fly, hey? Wal,
excuse me from them birds. I seen one, an’
thet’s enough for me.... An’, changin’
the subject, Miss Lenore, beggin’ your pardon you
ain’t ridin’ in the car much these days.”
“No, Jake, I’m not,”
she replied, and looked at the cowboy. She would
have trusted Jake as she would her brother Jim.
And now he looked earnest.
“Wal, I’m sure glad.
I heerd Nash call an’ ask you to go with him.
I seen his eyes when he said it.... Sure I know
you’d never look at the likes of him. But
I want to tell you he ain’t no good.
I’ve been watchin’ him. Your dad’s
orders. He’s mixed up with the I.W.W.’s.
But thet ain’t what I mean. It’s He’s I ”
“Thank you, Jake,” replied
Lenore, as the cowboy floundered. “I appreciate
your thought of me. But you needn’t worry.”
“I was worryin’ a little,”
he said. “You see, I know men better ’n
your dad, an’ I reckon this Nash would do anythin’.”
“What’s father keeping him for?”
“Wal, Anderson wants to find
out a lot about thet I.W.W., an’ he ain’t
above takin’ risks to do it, either.”
The stable-boys and men Lenore passed
all had an eager good morning for her. She often
boasted to her father that she could run “Many
Waters” as well as he. Sometimes there
were difficulties that Lenore had no little part in
smoothing over. The barns and corrals were familiar
places to her, and she insisted upon petting every
horse, in some instances to Jake’s manifest
concern.
“Some of them bosses are bad,” he insisted.
“To be sure they are when
wicked cowboys cuff and kick them,” replied
Lenore, laughingly.
“Wal, if I’m wicked, I’m
a-goin’ to war,” said Jake, reflectively.
“Them Germans bother me.”
“But, Jake, you don’t come in the draft
age, do you?”
“Jest how old do you think I am?”
“Sometimes about fourteen, Jake.”
“Much obliged. Wal, the
fact is I’m over age, but I’ll gamble I
can pack a gun an’ shoot as straight an’
eat as much as any young feller.”
“I’ll bet so, too, Jake.
But I hope you won’t go. We absolutely could
not run this ranch without you.”
“Sure I knew thet. Wal
then, I reckon I’ll hang around till you’re
married, Miss Lenore,” he drawled.
Again the scarlet mantled Lenore’s cheeks.
“Good. We’ll have
many harvests then, Jake, and many rides,” she
replied.
“Aw, I don’t know ” he
began.
But Lenore ran away so that she could hear no more.
“What’s the matter with
me that people that Jake should ?”
she began, and ended with a hand on each soft, hot
cheek. There was something different about her,
that seemed certain. And if her eyes were as bright
as the day, with its deep blue and white clouds and
shining green and golden fields, then any one might
think what he liked and have proof for his tormenting.
“But married! I? Not much. Do
I want a husband getting shot?”
The path Lenore trod so lightly led
along a great peach and apple orchard where the trees
were set far apart and the soil was cultivated, so
that not a weed nor a blade of grass showed. The
fragrance of fruit in the air, however, did not come
from this orchard, for the trees were young and the
reddening fruit rare. Down the wide aisles she
saw the thick and abundant green of the older orchards.
At length Lenore reached the alfalfa-fields,
and here among the mounds of newly cut hay that smelled
so fresh and sweet she wanted to roll, and she had
to run. Two great wagons with four horses each
were being loaded. Lenore knew all the workmen
except one. Silas Warner, an old, gray-headed
farmer, had been with her father as long as she could
remember.
“Whar you goin’, lass?”
he called, as he halted to wipe his red face with
a huge bandana. “It’s too hot to run
the way you’re a-doin’.”
“Oh, Silas, it’s a grand morning!”
she replied.
“Why, so ‘tis! Pitchin’
hay hyar made me think it was hot,” he said,
as she tripped on. “Now, lass, don’t
go up to the wheat-fields.”
But Lenore heard heedlessly, and she
ran on till she came to the uncut alfalfa, which impeded
her progress. A wonderful space of green and
purple stretched away before her, and into it she waded.
It came up to her knees, rich, thick, soft, and redolent
of blossom and ripeness. Hard tramping it soon
got to be. She grew hot and breathless, and her
legs ached from the force expended in making progress
through the tangled hay. At last she was almost
across the field, far from the cutters, and here she
flung herself, to roll and lie flat and gaze up through
the deep azure of sky, wonderingly, as if to penetrate
its secret. And then she hid her face in the
fragrant thickness that seemed to force a whisper
from her.
“I wonder how will
I feel when I see him again....
Oh, I wonder!”
The sound of the whispered words,
the question, the inevitableness of something involuntary,
proved traitors to her happy dreams, her assurance,
her composure. She tried to burrow under the hay,
to hide from that tremendous bright-blue eye, the
sky. Suddenly she lay very quiet, feeling the
strange glow and throb and race of her blood, sensing
the mystery of her body, trying to trace the thrills,
to control this queer, tremulous, internal state.
But she found she could not think clearly; she could
only feel. And she gave up trying. It was
sweet to feel.
She rose and went on. Another
field lay beyond, a gradual slope, covered with a
new growth of alfalfa. It was a light green a
contrast to the rich darkness of that behind her.
At the end of this field ran a swift little brook,
clear and musical, open to the sky in places, and in
others hidden under flowery banks. Birds sang
from invisible coverts; a quail sent up clear flutelike
notes; and a lark caroled, seemingly out of the sky.
Lenore wet her feet crossing the brook,
and, climbing the little knoll above, she sat down
upon a stone to dry them in the sun. It had a
burn that felt good. No matter how hot the sun
ever got there, she liked it. Always there seemed
air to breathe and the shade was pleasant.
From this vantage-point, a favorite
one with Lenore, she could see all the alfalfa-fields,
the hill crowned by the beautiful white-and-red house,
the acres of garden, and the miles of orchards.
The grazing and grain fields began behind her.
The brook murmured below her and the
birds sang. She heard the bees humming by.
The air out here was clear of scent of fruit and hay,
and it bore a drier odor, not so sweet. She could
see the workmen, first those among the alfalfa, and
then the men, and women, too, bending over on the
vegetable-gardens. Likewise she could see the
gleam of peaches, apples, pears and plums a
colorful and mixed gleam, delightful to the eye.
Wet or dry, it seemed that her feet
refused to stay still, and once again she was wandering.
A gray, slate-colored field of oats invited her steps,
and across this stretch she saw a long yellow slope
of barley, where the men were cutting. Beyond
waved the golden fields of wheat. Lenore imagined
that when she reached them she would not desire to
wander farther.
There were two machines cutting on
the barley slope, one drawn by eight horses, and the
other by twelve. When Lenore had crossed the oat-field
she discovered a number of strange men lounging in
the scant shade of a line of low trees that separated
the fields. Here she saw Adams, the foreman;
and he espied her at the same moment. He had been
sitting down, talking to the men. At once he
rose to come toward Lenore.
“Is your father with you?” he asked.
“No; he’s too slow for me,” replied
Lenore. “Who are these men?”
“They’re strangers looking for jobs.”
“I.W.W. men?” queried Lenore, in lower
voice.
“Surely must be,” he replied.
Adams was not a young, not a robust man, and he seemed
to carry a burden of worry. “Your father
said he would come right out.”
“I hope he doesn’t,”
said Lenore, bluntly. “Father has a way
with him, you know.”
“Yes, I know. And it’s
the way we’re needing here in the Valley,”
replied the foreman, significantly.
“Is that the new harvester-thresher
father just bought?” asked Lenore, pointing
to the huge machine, shining and creeping behind the
twelve horses.
“Yes, that’s the McCormack
and it’s a dandy,” returned Adams.
“With machines like that we can get along without
the I.W.W.”
“I want a ride on it,”
declared Lenore, and she ran along to meet the harvester.
She waved her hand to the driver, Bill Jones, another
old hand, long employed by her father. Bill hauled
back on the many-branched reins, and when the horses
stopped the clattering, whirring roar of the machine
also ceased.
“Howdy, miss! Reckon this ’s a regular
I.W.W. hold-up.”
“Worse than that, Bill,”
gaily replied Lenore as she mounted the platform where
another man sat on a bag of barley. Lenore did
not recognize him. He looked rugged and honest,
and beamed upon her.
“Watch out fer yer dress,”
he said, pointing with grimy hand to the dusty wheels
and braces so near her.
“Let me drive, Bill?” she asked.
“Wal, now, I wisht I could,”
he replied, dryly. “You sure can drive,
miss. But drivin’ ain’t all this here
job.”
“What can’t I do? I’ll bet
you ”
“I never seen a girl that could throw anythin’
straight. Did you?”
“Well, not so very. I forgot
how you drove the horses.... Go ahead. Don’t
let me delay the harvest.”
Bill called sonorously to his twelve
horses, and as they bent and strained and began to
bob their heads, the clattering roar filled the air.
Also a cloud of dust and thin, flying streams of chaff
enveloped Lenore. The high stalks of barley,
in wide sheets, fell before the cutter upon an apron,
to be carried by feeders into the body of the machine.
The straw, denuded of its grain, came out at the rear,
to be dropped, while the grain streamed out of a tube
on the side next to Lenore, to fall into an open sack.
It made a short shift of harvesting.
Lenore liked the even, nodding rhythm
of the plodding horses, and the way Bill threw a pebble
from a sack on his seat, to hit this or that horse
not keeping in line or pulling his share. Bill’s
aim was unerring. He never hit the wrong horse,
which would have been the case had he used a whip.
The grain came out in so tiny a stream that Lenore
wondered how a bag was ever filled. But she saw
presently that even a tiny stream, if running steadily,
soon made bulk. That was proof of the value of
small things, even atoms.
No marvel was it that Bill and his
helper were as grimy as stokers of a furnace.
Lenore began to choke with the fine dust and to feel
her eyes smart and to see it settle on her hands and
dress. She then had appreciation of the nature
of a ten-hour day for workmen cutting eighteen acres
of barley. How would they ever cut the two thousand
acres of wheat? No wonder many men were needed.
Lenore sympathized with the operators of that harvester-thresher,
but she did not like the dirt. If she had been
a man, though, that labor, hard as it was, would have
appealed to her. Harvesting the grain was beautiful,
whether in the old, slow method of threshing or with
one of these modern man-saving machines.
She jumped off, and the big, ponderous
thing, almost gifted with intelligence, it seemed
to Lenore, rolled on with its whirring roar, drawing
its cloud of dust, and leaving behind a litter of straw.
It developed then that Adams had walked
along with the machine, and he now addressed her.
“Will you be staying here till
your father comes?” he asked.
“No, Mr. Adams. Why do you ask?”
“You oughtn’t come out
here alone or go back alone.... All these strange
men! Some of them hard customers! You’ll
excuse me, miss, but this harvest is not like other
harvests.”
“I’ll wait for my father
and I’ll not go out of sight,” replied
Lenore. Thanking the foreman for his thoughtfulness,
she walked away, and soon she stood at the edge of
the first wheat-field.
The grain was not yet ripe but near
at hand it was a pale gold. The wind, out of
the west, waved and swept the wheat, while the almost
imperceptible shadows followed.
A road half overgrown with grass and
goldenrod bordered the wheat-field, and it wound away
down toward the house. Her father appeared mounted
on the white horse he always rode. Lenore sat
down in the grass to wait for him. Nodding stalks
of goldenrod leaned to her face. When looked at
closely, how truly gold their color! Yet it was
not such a gold as that of the rich blaze of ripe
wheat. She was admitting to her consciousness
a jealousy of anything comparable to wheat. And
suddenly she confessed that her natural love for it
had been augmented by a subtle growing sentiment.
Not sentiment about the war or the need of the Allies
or meaning of the staff of life. She had sensed
young Dorn’s passion for wheat and it had made
a difference to her.
“No use lying to myself!”
she soliloquized. “I think of him!..
I can’t help it... I ran out here, wild,
restless, unable to reason... just because I’d
decided to see him again to make sure I I
really didn’t care.... How furious how
ridiculous I’ll feel when when ”
Lenore did not complete her thought,
because she was not sure. Nothing could be any
truer than the fact that she had no idea how she would
feel. She began sensitively to distrust herself.
She who had always been so sure of motives, so contented
with things as they were, had been struck by an absurd
fancy that haunted because it was fiercely repudiated
and scorned, that would give her no rest until it was
proven false. But suppose it were true!
A succeeding blankness of mind awoke
to the clip-clop of hoofs and her father’s cheery
halloo.
Anderson dismounted and, throwing
his bridle, he sat down heavily beside her.
“You can ride back home,” he said.
Lenore knew she had been reproved
for her wandering out there, and she made a motion
to rise. His big hand held her down.
“No hurry, now I’m here.
Grand day, ain’t it? An’ I see the
barley’s goin’. Them sacks look good
to me.”
Lenore waited with some perturbation.
She had a guilty conscience and she feared he meant
to quiz her about her sudden change of front regarding
the Bend trip. So she could not look up and she
could not say a word.
“Jake says that Nash has been
tryin’ to make up to you. Any sense in
what he says?” asked her father, bluntly.
“Why, hardly. Oh, I’ve
noticed Nash is is rather fresh, as Rose
calls it,” replied Lenore, somewhat relieved
at this unexpected query.
“Yes, he’s been makin’
eyes at Rose. She told me,” replied Anderson.
“Discharge him,” said Lenore, forcibly.
“So I ought. But let me
tell you, Lenore. I’ve been hopin’
to get Nash dead to rights.”
“What more do you want?” she demanded.
“I mean regardin’ his
relation to the I.W.W.... Listen. Here’s
the point. Nash has been tracked an’ caught
in secret talks with prominent men in this country.
Men of foreign blood an’ mebbe foreign sympathies.
We’re at the start of big an’ bad times
in the good old U.S. No one can tell how bad.
Well, you know my position in the Golden Valley.
I’m looked to. Reckon this I.W.W. has got
me a marked man. I’m packin’ two
guns right now. An’ you bet Jake is packin’
the same. We don’t travel far apart any
more this summer.”
Lenore had started shudderingly and
her look showed her voiceless fear.
“You needn’t tell your
mother,” he went on, more intimately. “I
can trust you an’ ... To come back to Nash.
He an’ this Glidden you remember,
one of those men at Dorn’s house they
are usin’ gold. They must have barrels
of it. If I could find out where that gold comes
from! Probably they don’t know. But
I might find out if men here in our own country are
hatchin’ plots with the I.W.W.”
“Plots! What for?” queried Lenore,
breathlessly.
“To destroy my wheat, to drive
off or bribe the harvest-hands, to cripple the crop
yield in the Northwest; to draw the militia here; in
short, to harass an’ weaken an’ slow down
our government in its preparation against Germany.”
“Why, that is terrible!” declared Lenore.
“I’ve a hunch from Jake there’s
a whisper of a plot to put me out of the way,”
said Anderson, darkly.
“Oh good Heavens!
You don’t mean it!” cried Lenore, distractedly.
“Sure I do. But that’s
no way for Anderson’s daughter to take it.
Our women have got to fight, too. We’ve
all got to meet these German hired devils with their
own weapons. Now, lass, you know you’ll
get these wheatlands of mine some day. It’s
in my will. That’s because you, like your
dad, always loved the wheat. You’d fight,
wouldn’t you, to save your grain for our soldiers bread
for your own brother Jim an’ for
your own land?”
“Fight! Would I?”
burst out Lenore, with a passionate little cry.
“Good! Now you’re talkin’!”
exclaimed her father.
“I’ll find out about this
Nash if you’ll let me,” declared
Lenore, as if inspired.
“How? What do you mean, girl?”
“I’ll encourage him.
I’ll make him think I’m a wishy-washy moonstruck
girl, smitten with him. All’s fair in war!...
If he means ill by my father ”
Anderson muttered low under his breath
and his big hand snapped hard at the nodding goldenrod.
“For my sake to help
me you’d encourage Nash flirt
with him a little find out all you could?”
“Yes, I would!” she cried,
deliberately. But she wanted to cover her face
with her hands. She trembled slightly, then grew
cold, with a sickening disgust at this strange, new,
uprising self.
“Wait a minute before you say
too much,” went on Anderson. “You’re
my best-beloved child, my Lenore, the lass I’ve
been so proud of all my life. I’d spill
blood to avenge an insult to you.... But, Lenore,
we’ve entered upon a terrible war. People
out here, especially the women, don’t realize
it yet. But you must realize it. When I said
good-by to Jim, my son, I I felt I’d
never look upon his face again!... I gave him
up. I could have held him back got
exemption for him. But, no, by God! I gave
him up to make safety and happiness and
prosperity for say, your children, an’
Rose’s, an’ Kathleen’s.... I’m
workin’ now for the future. So must every
loyal man an’ every loyal woman! We love
our own country. An’ I ask you to see as
I see the terrible danger to that country. Think
of you an’ Rose an’ Kathleen bein’
treated like those poor Belgian girls! Well,
you’d get that an’ worse if the Germans
won this war. An’ the point is, for us
to win, every last one of us must fight, sacrifice
to that end, an’ hang together.”
Anderson paused huskily and swallowed
hard while he looked away across the fields.
Lenore felt herself drawn by an irresistible power.
The west wind rustled through the waving wheat.
She heard the whir of the threshers. Yet all
seemed unreal. Her father’s passion had
made this place another world.
“So much for that,” resumed
Anderson. “I’m goin’ to do my
best. An’ I may make blunders. I’ll
play the game as it’s dealt out to me. Lord
knows I feel all in the dark. But it’s the
nature of the effort, the spirit, that’ll count.
I’m goin’ to save most of the wheat on
my ranches. An’ bein’ a Westerner
who can see ahead, I know there’s goin’
to be blood spilled.... I’d give a lot to
know who sent this Nash spyin’ on me. I’m
satisfied now he’s an agent, a spy, a plotter
for a gang that’s marked me. I can’t
prove it yet, but I feel it. Maybe nothin’
worth while worth the trouble will
ever be found out from him. But I don’t
figure that way. I say play their own game an’
take a chance.... If you encouraged Nash you’d
probably find out all about him. The worst of
it is could you be slick enough? Could a girl
as fine an’ square an’ high-spirited as
you ever double-cross a man, even a scoundrel like
Nash? I reckon you could, considerin’ the
motive. Women are wonderful.... Well, if
you can fool him, make him think he’s a winner,
flatter him till he swells up like a toad, promise
to elope with him, be curious, jealous, make him tell
where he goes, whom he meets, show his letters, all
without ever sufferin’ his hand on you, I’ll
give my consent. I’d think more of you
for it. Now the question is, can you do it?”
“Yes,” whispered Lenore.
“Good!” exploded Anderson,
in a great relief. Then he began to mop his wet
face. He arose, showing the weight of heavy guns
in his pockets, and he gazed across the wheat-fields.
“That wheat’ll be ripe in a week.
It sure looks fine.... Lenore, you ride back
home now. Don’t let Jake pump you.
He’s powerful curious. An’ I’ll
go give these I.W.W.’s a first dose of Anderson.”
He turned away without looking at
her, and he hesitated, bending over to pluck a stem
of goldenrod.
“Lass you’re you’re
like your mother”, he said, unsteadily.
“An’ she helped me win out durin’
my struggle here. You’re brave an’
you’re big.”
Lenore wanted to say something, to
show her feeling, to make her task seem lighter, but
she could not speak.
“We’re pards now with
no secrets”, he continued, with a different note
in his voice. “An’ I want you to know
that it ain’t likely Nash or Glidden will get
out of this country alive.”