Three days later, Lenore accompanied
her father on the ride to the Bend country. She
sat in the back seat of the car with Jake an
arrangement very gratifying to the cowboy, but received
with ill-concealed displeasure by the driver, Nash.
They had arranged to start at sunrise, and it became
manifest that Nash had expected Lenore to sit beside
him all during the long ride. It was her father,
however, who took the front seat, and behind Nash’s
back he had slyly winked at Lenore, as if to compliment
her on the evident success of their deep plot.
Lenore, at the first opportunity that presented, shot
Nash a warning glance which was sincere enough.
Jake had begun to use keen eyes, and there was no
telling what he might do.
The morning was cool, sweet, fresh,
with a red sun presaging a hot day. The big car
hummed like a droning bee and seemed to cover the miles
as if by magic. Lenore sat with face uncovered,
enjoying the breeze and the endless colorful scene
flashing by, listening to Jake’s amusing comments,
and trying to keep back thought of what discovery might
await her before the end of this day.
Once across the Copper River, they
struck the gradual ascent, and here the temperature
began to mount and the dust to fly. Lenore drew
her veils close and, leaning comfortably back, she
resigned herself to wait and to endure.
By the flight of a crow it was about
a hundred miles from Anderson’s ranch to Palmer;
but by the round-about roads necessary to take the
distance was a great deal longer. Lenore was well
aware when they got up on the desert, and the time
came when she thought she would suffocate. There
appeared to be intolerable hours in which no one spoke
and only the hum and creak of the machine throbbed
in her ears. She could not see through her veils
and did not part them until a stop was made at Palmer.
Her father got out, sputtering and
gasping, shaking the dust in clouds from his long
linen coat. Jake, who always said he lived on
dust and heat, averred it was not exactly a regular
fine day. Lenore looked out, trying to get a
breath of air. Nash busied himself with the hot
engine.
The little country town appeared dead,
and buried under dust. There was not a person
in sight nor a sound to be heard. The sky resembled
molten lead, with a blazing center too bright for
the gaze of man.
Anderson and Jake went into the little
hotel to get some refreshments. Lenore preferred
to stay in the car, saying she wanted only a cool
drink. The moment the two men were out of sight
Nash straightened up to gaze darkly and hungrily at
Lenore.
“This’s a good a chance
as we’ll get,” he said, in an eager, hurried
whisper.
“For what?” asked Lenore, aghast.
“To run off,” he replied, huskily.
Lenore had proceeded so cleverly to
carry out her scheme that in three days Nash had begun
to implore and demand that she elope with him.
He had been so much of a fool. But she as yet
had found out but little about him. His right
name was Ruenke. He was a socialist. He had
plenty of money and hinted of mysterious sources for
more.
At this Lenore hid her face, and while
she fell back in pretended distress, she really wanted
to laugh. She had learned something new in these
few days, and that was to hate.
“Oh no! no!” she murmured.
“I I can’t think of that yet.”
“But why not?” he demanded,
in shrill violence. His gloved hand clenched
on the tool he held.
“Mother has been so unhappy with
my brother Jim off to the war. I I
just couldn’t now. Harry, you
must give me time. It’s all so so
sudden. Please wait!”
Nash appeared divided between two
emotions. Lenore watched him from behind her
parted veil. She had been astonished to find out
that, side by side with her intense disgust and shame
at the part she was playing, there was a strong, keen,
passionate interest in it, owing to the fact that,
though she could prove little against this man, her
woman’s intuition had sensed his secret deadly
antagonism toward her father. By little significant
mannerisms and revelations he had more and more betrayed
the German in him. She saw it in his overbearing
conceit, his almost instant assumption that he was
her master. At first Lenore feared him, but,
as she learned to hate him she lost her fear.
She had never been alone with him except under such
circumstances as this; and she had decided she would
not be.
“Wait?” he was expostulating.
“But it’s going to get hot for me.”
“Oh!... What do you mean?” she begged.
“You frighten me.”
“Lenore, the I.W.W. will have
hard sledding in this wheat country. I belong
to that. I told you. But the union is run
differently this summer. And I’ve got work
to do that I don’t like, since I fell
in love with you. Come, run off with me and I’ll
give it up.”
Lenore trembled at this admission.
She appeared to be close upon further discovery.
“Harry, how wildly you talk!”
she exclaimed. “I hardly know you.
You frighten me with your mysterious talk....
Have a a little consideration
for me.”
Nash strode back to lean into the
car. Behind his huge goggles his eyes gleamed.
His gloved hand closed hard on her arm.
“It is sudden. It’s
got to be sudden,” he said, in fierce undertone.
“You must trust me.”
“I will. But you must confide
in me,” she replied, earnestly. “I’m
not quite a fool. You’re rushing me too too ”
Suddenly he released her, threw up
his hand, then quickly stepped back to the front of
the car. Jake stood in the door of the hotel.
He had seen that action of Nash’s. Then
Anderson appeared, followed by a boy carrying a glass
of water for Lenore. They approached the car,
Jake sauntering last, with his curious gaze on Nash.
“Go in an’ get a bite
an’ a drink,” said Anderson to the driver.
“An’ hurry.”
Nash obeyed. Jake’s eyes
never left him until he entered the door. Then
Jake stepped in beside Lenore.
“Thet water’s wet, anyhow,” he drawled.
“We’ll get a good cold
drink at Dorn’s,” said Anderson. “Lass,
how are you makin’ it?”
“Fine,” she replied, smiling.
“So I seen,” significantly added Jake,
with a piercing glance at her.
Lenore realized then that she would
have to confide in Jake or run the risk of having
violence done to Nash. So she nodded wisely at
the cowboy and winked mischievously, and, taking advantage
of Anderson’s entering the car, she whispered
in Jake’s ear: “I’m finding
out things. Tell you later.”
The cowboy looked anything but convinced;
and he glanced with narrowed eyes at Nash as that
worthy hurried back to the car.
With a lurch and a leap the car left
Palmer behind in a cloud of dust. The air was
furnace-hot, oppressive, and exceedingly dry.
Lenore’s lips smarted so that she continually
moistened them. On all sides stretched dreary
parched wheat-fields. Anderson shook his head
sadly. Jake said: “Ain’t thet
too bad? Not half growed, an’ sure too late
now.”
Near at hand Lenore saw the short
immature dirty-whitish wheat, and she realized that
it was ruined.
“It’s been gettin’
worse, Jake,” remarked Anderson. “Most
of this won’t be cut at all. An’
what is cut won’t yield seedlings. I see
a yellow patch here an’ there on the north slopes,
but on the most part the Bend’s a failure.”
“Father, you remember Dorn’s
section, that promised so well?” asked Lenore.
“Yes. But it promised only
in case of rain. I look for the worst,”
replied Anderson, regretfully.
“It looks like storm-clouds
over there,” said Lenore, pointing far ahead.
Through the drifting veils of heat,
far across the bare, dreamy hills of fallow and the
blasted fields of wheat, stood up some huge white
columnar clouds, a vivid contrast to the coppery sky.
“By George! there’s a
thunderhead!” exclaimed Anderson. “Jake,
what do you make of that?”
“Looks good to me,” replied Jake, who
was always hopeful.
Lenore bore the hot wind and the fine,
choking dust without covering her face. She wanted
to see all the hills and valleys of this desert of
wheat. Her heart beat a little faster as, looking
across that waste on waste of heroic labor, she realized
she was nearing the end of a ride that might be momentous
for her. The very aspect of that wide, treeless
expanse, with all its overwhelming meaning, seemed
to make her a stronger and more thoughtful girl.
If those endless wheat-fields were indeed ruined,
what a pity, what a tragedy! Not only would young
Dorn be ruined, but perhaps many other toiling farmers.
Somehow Lenore felt no hopeless certainty of ruin
for the young man in whom she was interested.
“There, on that slope!”
spoke up Anderson, pointing to a field which was yellow
in contrast to the surrounding gray field. “There’s
a half-section of fair wheat.”
But such tinges of harvest gold
were not many in half a dozen miles of dreary hills.
Where were the beautiful shadows in the wheat? wondered
Lenore. Not a breath of wind appeared to stir
across those fields.
As the car neared the top of a hill
the road curved into another, and Lenore saw a dusty
flash of another car passing on ahead.
Suddenly Jake leaned forward.
“Boss, I seen somethin’
throwed out of thet car into the wheat,”
he said.
“What? Mebbe it was
a bottle,” replied Anderson, peering ahead.
“Nope. Sure wasn’t
thet.... There! I seen it again. Watch,
boss!”
Lenore strained her eyes and felt
a stir of her pulses. Jake’s voice was
perturbing. Was it strange that Nash slowed up
a little where there was no apparent need? Then
Lenore saw a hand flash out of the side of the car
ahead and throw a small, glinting object into the wheat.
“There! Seen it again,” said Jake.
“I saw!... Jake, mark that spot....
Nash, slow down,” yelled Anderson.
Lenore gathered from the look of her
father and the cowboy that something was amiss, but
she could not guess what it might be. Nash bent
sullenly at his task of driving.
“I reckon about here,” said Jake, waving
his hand.
“Stop her,” ordered Anderson,
and as the car came to a halt he got out, followed
by Jake.
“Wal, I marked it by thet rock,” declared
the cowboy.
“So did I,” responded
Anderson. “Let’s get over the fence
an’ find what it was they threw in there.”
Jake rested a lean hand on a post
and vaulted the fence. But Anderson had to climb
laboriously and painfully over the barbed-wire obstruction.
Lenore marveled at his silence and his persistence.
Anderson hated wire fences. Presently he got
over, and then he divided his time between searching
in the wheat and peering after the strange car that
was drawing far away.
Lenore saw Jake pick up something and scrutinize it.
“I’ll be dog-goned!”
he muttered. Then he approached Anderson.
“What is thet?”
“Jake, you can lambaste me if
I ever saw the likes,” replied Anderson.
“But it looks bad. Let’s rustle after
that car.”
As Anderson clambered into his seat
once more he looked dark and grim.
“Catch that car ahead,”
he tersely ordered Nash. Whereupon the driver
began to go through his usual motions in starting.
“Lenore, what do you make of
this?” queried Anderson, turning to show her
a small cake of some gray substance, soft and wet to
the touch.
“I don’t know what it
is,” replied Lenore, wonderingly. “Do
you?”
“No. An’ I’d
give a lot Say, Nash, hurry! Overhaul
that car!”
Anderson turned to see why his order
had not been obeyed. He looked angry. Nash
made hurried motions. The car trembled, the machinery
began to whir then came a tremendous buzzing
roar, a violent shaking of the car, followed by sharp
explosions, and silence.
“You stripped the gears!”
shouted Anderson, with the red fading out of his face.
“No; but something’s wrong,”
replied Nash. He got out to examine the engine.
Anderson manifestly controlled strong
feeling. Lenore saw Jake’s hand go to her
father’s shoulder. “Boss,” he
whispered, “we can’t ketch thet car now.”
Anderson resigned himself, averted his face so that
he could not see Nash, who was tinkering with the
engine. Lenore believed then that Nash had deliberately
stalled the engine or disordered something, so as
to permit the escape of the strange car ahead.
She saw it turn off the long, straight road ahead
and disappear to the right. After some minutes’
delay Nash resumed his seat and started the car once
more.
From the top of the next hill Lenore
saw the Dorn farm and home. All the wheat looked
parched. She remembered, however, that the section
of promising grain lay on the north slope, and therefore
out of sight from where she was.
“Looks as bad as any,”
said Anderson. “Good-by to my money.”
Lenore shut her eyes and thought of
herself, her inward state. She seemed calm, and
glad to have that first part of the journey almost
ended. Her motive in coming was not now the impelling
thing that had actuated her.
When next the car slowed down she
heard her father say, “Drive in by the house.”
Then Lenore, opening her eyes, saw
the gate, the trim little orchard with its scant shade,
the gray old weatherbeaten house which she remembered
so well. The big porch looked inviting, as it
was shady and held an old rocking-chair and a bench
with blue cushions. A door stood wide open.
No one appeared to be on the premises.
“Nash, blow your horn an’
then hunt around for somebody,” said Anderson.
“Come, get out, Lenore. You must be half
dead.”
“Oh no. Only half dust
and half fire,” replied Lenore, laughing, as
she stepped out. What a relief to get rid of
coat, veils, bonnet, and to sit on a shady porch where
a faint breeze blew! Just at that instant she
heard a low, distant rumbling. Thunder! It
thrilled her. Jake brought her a cold, refreshing
drink, and she sent him back after another. She
wet her handkerchief and bathed her hot face.
It was indeed very comfortable there after that long
hot ride.
“Miss Lenore, I seen thet Nash
pawin’ you,” said the cowboy, “an’
by Gosh! I couldn’t believe my eyes!”
“Not so loud! Jake, the
young gentleman imagines I’m in love with him,”
replied Lenore.
“Wall, I’ll remove his
imagining’,” declared Jake, coolly.
“Jake, you will do nothing.”
“Ahuh! Then you air in love with him?”
Lenore was compelled to explain to
this loyal cowboy just what the situation meant.
Whereupon Jake swore his amaze, and said, “I’m
a-goin’ to lick him, anyhow, fer thet!”
And he caught up the tin cup and shuffled away.
Footsteps and voices sounded on the
path, upon which presently appeared Anderson and young
Dorn.
“Father’s gone to Wheatly,”
he was saying. “But I’m glad to tell
you we’ll pay twenty thousand dollars on the
debt as soon as we harvest. If it rains we’ll
pay it all and have thirty thousand left.”
“Good! I sure hope it rains.
An’ that thunder sounds hopeful,” responded
Anderson.
“It’s been hopeful like
that for several days, but no rain,” said Dorn.
And then, espying Lenore, he seemed startled out of
his eagerness. He flushed slightly. “I I
didn’t see you had brought your daughter.”
He greeted her somewhat bashfully.
And Lenore returned the greeting calmly, watching
him steadily and waiting for the nameless sensations
she had imagined would attend this meeting. But
whatever these might be, they did not come to overwhelm
her. The gladness of his voice, as he had spoken
so eagerly to her father about the debt, had made her
feel very kindly toward him. It might have been
natural for a young man to resent this dragging debt.
But he was fine. She observed, as he sat down,
that, once the smile and flush left his face, he seemed
somewhat thinner and older than she had pictured him.
A shadow lay in his eyes and his lips were sad.
He had evidently been working, upon their arrival.
He wore overalls, dusty and ragged; his arms, bare
to the elbow, were brown and muscular; his thin cotton
shirt was wet with sweat and it clung to his powerful
shoulders.
Anderson surveyed the young man with friendly glance.
“What’s your first name?” he queried,
with his blunt frankness.
“Kurt,” was the reply.
“Is that American?”
“No. Neither is Dorn. But Kurt Dorn
is an American.”
“Hum! So I see, an’
I’m powerful glad.... An’ you’ve
saved the big section of promisin’ wheat?”
“Yes. We’ve been
lucky. It’s the best and finest wheat father
ever raised. If it rains the yield will go sixty
bushels to the acre.”
“Sixty? Whew!” ejaculated Anderson.
Lenore smiled at these wheat men,
and said: “It surely will rain and
likely storm to-day. I am a prophet who never
fails.”
“By George! that’s true!
Lenore has anybody beat when it comes to figurín’
the weather,” declared Anderson.
Dorn looked at her without speaking,
but his smile seemed to say that she could not help
being a prophet of good, of hope, of joy.
“Say, Lenore, how many bushels
in a section at sixty per acre?” went on Anderson.
“Thirty-eight thousand four hundred,”
replied Lenore.
“An’ what’ll you sell for?”
asked Anderson of Dorn.
“Father has sold at two dollars
and twenty-five cents a bushel,” replied Dorn.
“Good! But he ought to
have waited. The government will set a higher
price.... How much will that come to, Lenore?”
Dorn’s smile, as he watched
Lenore do her mental arithmetic, attested to the fact
that he already had figured out the sum.
“Eighty-six thousand four hundred
dollars,” replied Lenore. “Is that
right?”
“An’ you’ll have
thirty thousand dollars left after all debts are paid?”
inquired Anderson.
“Yes, sir. I can hardly
realize it. That’s a fortune for
one section of wheat. But we’ve had four
bad seasons.... Oh, if it only rains to-day!”
Lenore turned her cheek to the faint
west wind. And then she looked long at the slowly
spreading clouds, white and beautiful, high up near
the sky-line, and dark and forbidding down along the
horizon.
“I knew a girl who could feel
things move when no one else could,” said Lenore.
“I’m sensitive like that at
least about wind and rain. Right now I can feel
rain in the air.”
“Then you have brought me luck,”
said Dorn, earnestly. “Indeed I guess my
luck has turned. I hated the idea of going away
with that debt unpaid.”
“Are you going away?” asked
Lenore, in surprise.
“Yes, rather,” he replied,
with a short, sardonic laugh. He fumbled in a
pocket of his overalls and drew forth a paper which
he opened. A flame burned the fairness from his
face; his eyes darkened and shone with peculiar intensity
of pride. “I was the first man drafted in
this Bend country.... My number was the first
called!”
“Drafted!” echoed Lenore,
and she seemed to be standing on the threshold of
an amazing and terrible truth.
“Lass, we forget,” said her father, rather
thickly.
“Oh, but why?”
cried Lenore. She had voiced the same poignant
appeal to her brother Jim. Why need he why
must he go to war? What for? And Jim had
called out a bitter curse on the Germans he meant to
kill.
“Why?” returned Dorn,
with the sad, thoughtful shadow returning to his eyes.
“How many times have I asked myself that?...
In one way, I don’t know.... I haven’t
told father yet!... It’s not for his sake....
But when I think deeply when I can feel
and see I mean I’m going for my country....
For you and your sisters.”
Like a soldier then Lenore received
her mortal blow facing him who dealt it, and it was
a sudden overwhelming realization of love. No
confusion, no embarrassment, no shame attended the
agony of that revelation. Outwardly she did not
seem to change at all. She felt her father’s
eyes upon her; but she had no wish to hide the tumult
of her heart. The moment made her a woman.
Where was the fulfilment of those vague, stingingly
sweet dreamy fancies of love? Where was her maiden
reserve, that she so boldly recognized an unsolicited
passion? Her eyes met Dorn’s steadily,
and she felt some vital and compelling spirit pass
from her to him. She saw him struggle with what
he could not understand. It was his glance that
wavered and fell, his hand that trembled, his breast
that heaved. She loved him. There had been
no beginning. Always he had lived in her dreams.
And like her brother he was going to kill and to be
killed.
Then Lenore gazed away across the
wheat-fields. The shadows came waving toward
her. A stronger breeze fanned her cheeks.
The heavens were darkening and low thunder rolled
along the battlements of the great clouds.
“Say, Kurt, what do you make
of this?” asked Anderson. Lenore, turning,
saw her father hold out the little gray cake that Jake
had found in the wheat-field.
Young Dorn seized it quickly, felt
and smelled and bit it.
“Where’d you get this?” he asked,
with excitement.
Anderson related the circumstance of its discovery.
“It’s a preparation, mostly
phosphorus,” replied Dorn. “When the
moisture evaporates it will ignite set fire
to any dry substance.... That is a trick of the
I.W.W. to burn the wheat-fields.”
“By all that’s !”
swore Anderson, with his jaw bulging. “Jake
an’ I knew it meant bad. But we didn’t
know what.”
“I’ve been expecting tricks
of all kinds,” said Dorn. “I have
four men watching the section.”
“Good! Say, that car turned
off to the right back here some miles.... But,
worse luck, the I.W.W.’s can work at night.”
“We’ll watch at night, too,” replied
Dorn.
Lenore was conscious of anger encroaching
upon the melancholy splendor of her emotions, and
the change was bitter.
“When the rain comes, won’t
it counteract the ignition of that phosphorus?”
she asked, eagerly, for she knew that rain would come.
“Only for the time being.
It ’ll be just as dry this time to-morrow as
it is now.”
“Then the wheat’s goin’
to burn,” declared Anderson, grimly. “If
that trick has been worked all over this country you’re
goin’ to have worse ’n a prairie fire.
The job on hand is to save this one section that has
a fortune tied up in it.”
“Mr. Anderson, that job looks
almost hopeless, in the light of this phosphorus trick.
What on earth can be done? I’ve four men.
I can’t hire any more, because I can’t
trust these strangers. And how can four men or
five, counting me, watch a square mile of wheat day
and night?”
The situation looked hopeless to Lenore
and she was sick. What cruel fates toyed with
this young farmer! He seemed to be sinking under
this last crowning blow. There in the sky, rolling
up and rumbling, was the long-deferred rain-storm
that meant freedom from debt, and a fortune besides.
But of what avail the rain if it was to rush the wheat
to full bursting measure only for the infernal touch
of the foreigner?
Anderson, however, was no longer a
boy. He had dealt with many and many a trial.
Never was he plunged into despair until after the dread
crisis had come to pass. His red forehead, frowning
and ridged with swelling blood-vessels, showed the
bent of his mind.
“Oh, it is hard!” said
Lenore to Dorn. “I’m so sorry!
But don’t give up. While there’s
life there’s hope!”
He looked up with tears in his eyes.
“Thank you.... I did weaken.
You see I’ve let myself believe too much for
dad’s sake. I don’t care about the
money for myself.... Money! What good will
money be to me now? It’s over
for me.... To get the wheat cut harvested that’s
all I hoped.... The army war France I
go to be ”
“Hush!” whispered Lenore,
and she put a soft hand upon his lips, checking the
end of that bitter speech. She felt him start,
and the look she met pierced her soul. “Hush!...
It’s going to rain!... Father will find
some way to save the wheat!... And you are coming
home after the war!”
He crushed her hand to his hot lips.
“You make me ashamed.
I won’t give up,” he said, brokenly.
“And when I’m over there in
the trenches, I’ll think ”
“Dorn, listen to this,”
rang out Anderson. “We’ll fool that
I.W.W. gang....It’s a-goin’ to rain.
So far so good. To-morrow you take this cake
of phosphorus an’ ride around all over the country.
Show it an’ tell the farmers their wheat’s
goin’ to burn. An’ offer them whose
fields are already ruined that fire can’t
do no more harm offer them big money to
help you save your section. Half a hundred men
could put out a fire if one did start. An’
these neighbors of yours, some of them will jump at
a chance to beat the I.W.W.... Boy, it can be
done!”
He ended with a big fist held aloft in triumph.
“See! Didn’t I tell
you?” murmured Lenore, softly. It touched
her deeply to see Dorn respond to hope. His haggard
face suddenly warmed and glowed.
“I never thought of that,”
he burst out, radiantly. “We can save the
wheat.... Mr. Anderson, I I can’t
thank you enough.”
“Don’t try,” replied the rancher.
“I tell you it will rain,”
cried Lenore, gaily. “Let’s walk out
there watch the storm come across the hills.
I love to see the shadows blow over the wheat.”
Lenore became aware, as she passed
the car, that Nash was glaring at her in no unmistakable
manner. She had forgotten all about him.
The sight of his jealous face somehow added to her
strange exhilaration.
They crossed the road from the house,
and, facing the west, had free prospect of the miles
of billowy hills and the magnificent ordnance of the
storm-clouds. The deep, low mutterings of thunder
seemed a grand and welcome music. Lenore stole
a look at Dorn, to see him, bareheaded, face upturned,
entranced. It was only a rain-storm coming!
Down in the valley country such storms were frequent
at this season, too common for their meaning to be
appreciated. Here in the desert of wheat rain
was a blessing, life itself.
The creamy-white, rounded edge of
the approaching clouds came and coalesced, spread
and mushroomed. Under them the body of the storm
was purple, lit now and then by a flash of lightning.
Long, drifting veils of rain, gray as thin fog, hung
suspended between sky and earth.
“Listen!” exclaimed Dorn.
A warm wind, laden with dry scent
of wheat, struck Lenore’s face and waved her
hair. It brought a silken, sweeping rustle, a
whispering of the bearded grain. The soft sound
thrilled Lenore. It seemed a sweet, hopeful message
that waiting had been rewarded, that the drought could
be broken. Again, and more beautiful than ever
before in her life, she saw the waves of shadow as
they came forward over the wheat. Rippling, like
breezes over the surface of a golden lake, they came
in long, broken lines, moving, following, changing,
until the whole wheat-field seemed in shadowy motion.
The cloud pageant rolled on above
and beyond. Lenore felt a sweet drop of rain
splash upon her upturned face. It seemed like
a caress. There came a pattering around her.
Suddenly rose a damp, faint smell of dust. Beyond
the hill showed a gray pall of rain, coming slowly,
charged with a low roar. The whisper of the sweeping
wheat was swallowed up.
Lenore stood her ground until heavy
rain drops fell thick and fast upon her, sinking through
her thin waist to thrill her flesh; and then, with
a last gay call to those two man lovers of wheat and
storms, she ran for the porch.
There they joined her, Anderson puffing
and smiling, Dorn still with that rapt look upon his
face. The rain swept up and roared on the roof,
while all around was streaked gray.
“Boy, there’s your thirty-thousand-dollar
rain!” shouted Anderson.
But Dorn did not hear. Once he
smiled at Lenore as if she were the good fairy who
had brought about this miracle. In his look Lenore
had deeper realization of him, of nature, and of life.
She loved rain, but always, thenceforth, she would
reverence it. Fresh, cool fragrance of a renewed
soil filled the air. All that dusty gray hue of
the earth had vanished, and it was wet and green and
bright. Even as she gazed the water seemed to
sink in as it fell, a precious relief to thirsty soil.
The thunder rolled away eastward and the storm passed.
The thin clouds following soon cleared away from the
western sky, rain-washed and blue, with a rainbow
curving down to bury its exquisite hues in the golden
wheat.