Kurt Dorn had indeed no hope of ever
seeing Lenore Anderson again, and he suffered a pang
that seemed to leave his heart numb, though Anderson’s
timely visit might turn out as providential as the
saving rain-storm. The wheat waved and rustled
as if with renewed and bursting life. The exquisite
rainbow still shone, a beautiful promise, in the sky.
But Dorn could not be happy in that moment.
This day Lenore Anderson had seemed
a bewildering fulfilment of the sweetness he had imagined
was latent in her. She had meant what was beyond
him to understand. She had gently put a hand to
his lips, to check the bitter words, and he had dared
to kiss her soft fingers. The thrill, the sweetness,
the incomprehensible and perhaps imagined response
of her pulse would never leave him. He watched
the big car until it was out of sight.
The afternoon was only half advanced
and there were numberless tasks to do. He decided
he could think and plan while he worked. As he
was about to turn away he espied another automobile,
this one coming from the opposite direction to that
Anderson had taken. The sight of it reminded
Dorn of the I.W.W. trick of throwing phosphorus cakes
into the wheat. He was suspicious of that car.
It slowed down in front of the Dorn homestead, turned
into the yard, and stopped near where Dorn stood.
The dust had caked in layers upon it. Someone
hailed him and asked if this was the Dorn farm.
Kurt answered in the affirmative, whereupon a tall
man, wearing a long linen coat, opened the car door
to step out. In the car remained the driver and
another man.
“My name is Hall,” announced
the stranger, with a pleasant manner. “I’m
from Washington, D.C. I represent the government
and am in the Northwest in the interest of the Conservation
Commission. Your name has been recommended to
me as one of the progressive young wheat-growers of
the Bend; particularly that you are an American, located
in a country exceedingly important to the United States
just now a country where foreign-born people
predominate.”
Kurt, somewhat startled and awed,
managed to give a courteous greeting to his visitor,
and asked him into the house. But Mr. Hall preferred
to sit outdoors on the porch. He threw off hat
and coat, and, taking an easy chair, he produced some
cigars.
“Will you smoke?” he asked, offering one.
Kurt declined with thanks. He
was aware of this man’s penetrating, yet kindly
scrutiny of him, and he had begun to wonder. This
was no ordinary visitor.
“Have you been drafted?” abruptly queried
Mr. Hall.
“Yes, sir. Mine was the
first number,” replied Kurt, with a little pride.
“Do you want exemption?” swiftly came
the second query.
It shocked Dorn, then stung him.
“No,” he said, forcibly.
“Your father’s sympathy is with Germany,
I understand.”
“Well, sir, I don’t know
how you understand that, but it’s true to
my regret and shame.”
“You want to fight?” went on the official.
“I hate the idea of war.
But I I guess I want to fight. Maybe
that’s because I’m feeling scrappy over
these I.W.W. tricks.”
“Dorn, the I.W.W. is only one
of the many phases of war that we must meet,”
returned Mr. Hall, and then for a moment he thoughtfully
drew upon his cigar.
“Young man, I like your talk.
And I’ll tell you a secret. My name’s
not Hall. Never mind my name. For you it’s
Uncle Sam!”
Whereupon, with a winning and fascinating
manner that seemed to Kurt at once intimate and flattering,
he began to talk fluently of the meaning of his visit,
and of its cardinal importance. The government
was looking far ahead, preparing for a tremendous,
and perhaps a lengthy, war. The food of the country
must be conserved. Wheat was one of the most vital
things in the whole world, and the wheat of America
was incalculably precious only the government
knew how precious. If the war was short a wheat
famine would come afterward; if it was long, the famine
would come before the war ended. But it was inevitable.
The very outcome of the war itself depended upon wheat.
The government expected a nation-wide
propaganda by the German interests which would be
carried on secretly and boldly, in every conceivable
way, to alienate the labor organizations, to bribe
or menace the harvesters, to despoil crops, and particularly
to put obstacles in the way of the raising and harvesting,
the transporting and storing of wheat. It would
take an army to protect the nation’s grain.
Dorn was earnestly besought by this
official to compass his district, to find out who
could be depended upon by the United States and who
was antagonistic, to impress upon the minds of all
his neighbors the exceeding need of greater and more
persistent cultivation of wheat.
“I accept. I’ll do
my best,” replied Kurt, grimly. “I’ll
be going some the next two weeks.”
“It’s deplorable that
most of the wheat in this section is a failure,”
said the official. “But we must make up
for that next year. I see you have one magnificent
wheat-field. But, fact is, I heard of that long
before I got here.”
“Yes? Where?” ejaculated
Kurt, quick to catch a significance in the other’s
words.
“I’ve motored direct from
Wheatly. And I’m sorry to say that what
I have now to tell you is not pleasant.... Your
father sold this wheat for eighty thousand dollars
in cash. The money was seen to be paid over by
a mill-operator of Spokane.... And your father
is reported to be suspiciously interested in the I.W.W.
men now at Wheatly.”
“Oh, that’s awful!”
exclaimed Kurt, with a groan. “How did you
learn that?”
“From American farmers men
that I had been instructed to approach, the same as
in your case. The information came quite by accident,
however, and through my inquiring about the I.W.W.”
“Father has not been rational
since the President declared war. He’s
very old. I’ve had trouble with him.
He might do anything.”
“My boy, there are multitudes
of irrational men nowadays and the number is growing....
I advise you to go at once to Wheatly and bring your
father home. It was openly said that he was taking
risks with that large sum of money.”
“Risks! Why, I can’t
understand that. The wheat’s not harvested
yet, let alone hauled to town. And to-day I learned
the I.W.W. are working a trick with cakes of phosphorus,
to burn the wheat.”
Kurt produced the cake of phosphorus
and explained its significance to the curious official.
“Cunning devils! Who but
a German would ever have thought of that?” he
exclaimed. “German science! To such
ends the Germans put their supreme knowledge!”
“I wonder what my father will
say about this phosphorus trick. I just wonder.
He loves the wheat. His wheat has taken prizes
at three world’s fairs. Maybe to see our
wheat burn would untwist that twist in his brain and
make him American.”
“I doubt it. Only death
changes the state of a real German, physical, moral,
and spiritual. Come, ride back to Glencoe with
me. I’ll drop you there. You can hire
a car and make Wheatly before dark.”
Kurt ran indoors, thinking hard as
he changed clothes. He told the housekeeper to
tell Jerry he was called away and would be back next
day. Putting money and a revolver in his pocket,
he started out, but hesitated and halted. He
happened to think that he was a poor shot with a revolver
and a fine one with a rifle. So he went back for
his rifle, a small high-power, repeating gun that
he could take apart and hide under his coat.
When he reached the porch the official glanced from
the weapon to Kurt’s face and said, with a flash
of spirit:
“It appears that you are in earnest!”
“I am. Something told me
to take this,” responded Kurt, as he dismounted
the rifle. “I’ve already had one run-in
with an I.W.W. I know tough customers when I
see them. These foreigners are the kind I don’t
want near me. And if I see one trying to fire
the wheat I’ll shoot his leg off.”
“I’m inclined to think
that Uncle Sam would not deplore your shooting a little
higher.... Dorn, you’re fine! You’re
all I heard you were! Shake hands!”
Kurt tingled all over as he followed
the official out to the car and took the seat given
him beside the driver. “Back to Glencoe,”
was the order. And then, even if conversation
had been in order, it would scarcely have been possible.
That driver could drive! He had no fear and he
knew his car. Kurt could drive himself, but he
thought that if he had been as good as this fellow
he would have chosen one of two magnificent services
for the army an ambulance-driver at the
front or an aeroplane scout.
On the way to Glencoe several squads
of idling and marching men were passed, all of whom
bore the earmarks of the I.W.W. Sight of them
made Kurt hug his gun and wonder at himself.
Never had he been a coward, but neither had he been
one to seek a fight. This suave, distinguished
government official, by his own significant metaphor,
Uncle Sam gone abroad to find true hearts, had wrought
powerfully upon Kurt’s temper. He sensed
events. He revolved in mind the need for him to
be cool and decisive when facing the circumstances
that were sure to arise.
At Glencoe, which was reached so speedily
that Kurt could scarcely credit his eyes, the official
said; “You’ll hear from me. Good-by
and good luck!”
Kurt hired a young man he knew to
drive him over to Wheatly. All the way Kurt brooded
about his father’s strange action. The old
man had left home before the rain-storm. How
did he know he could guarantee so many bushels of
wheat as the selling-price indicated? Kurt divined
that his father had acted upon one of his strange
weather prophecies. For he must have been absolutely
sure of rain to save the wheat.
Darkness had settled down when Kurt
reached Wheatly and left the car at the railroad station.
Wheatly was a fairly good-sized little town. There
seemed to be an unusual number of men on the dark streets.
Dim lights showed here and there. Kurt passed
several times near groups of conversing men, but he
did not hear any significant talk.
Most of the stores were open and well
filled with men, but to Kurt’s sharp eyes there
appeared to be much more gossip going on than business.
The town was not as slow and quiet as was usual with
Bend towns. He listened for war talk, and heard
none. Two out of every three men who spoke in
his hearing did not use the English language.
Kurt went into the office of the first hotel he found.
There was no one present. He glanced at an old
register lying on the desk. No guests had registered
for several days.
Then Kurt went out and accosted a
man leaning against a hitching-rail.
“What’s going on in this town?”
The man stood rather indistinctly
in the uncertain light. Kurt, however, made out
his eyes and they were regarding him suspiciously.
“Nothin’ onusual,” was the reply.
“Has harvesting begun in these parts?”
“Some barley cut, but no wheat. Next week,
I reckon.”
“How’s the wheat?”
“Some bad an’ some good.”
“Is this town a headquarters for the I.W.W.?”
“No. But there’s
a big camp of I.W.W.’s near here. Reckon
you’re one of them union fellers?”
“I am not,” declared Kurt, bluntly.
“Reckon you sure look like one, with thet gun
under your coat.”
“Are you going to hire I.W.W.
men?” asked Kurt, ignoring the other’s
observation.
“I’m only a farm-hand,”
was the sullen reply. “An’ I tell
you I won’t join no I.W.W.”
Kurt spared himself a moment to give
this fellow a few strong proofs of the fact that any
farm-hand was wise to take such a stand against the
labor organization. Leaving the fellow gaping
and staring after him, Kurt crossed the street to
enter another hotel. It was more pretentious
than the first, with a large, well lighted office.
There were loungers at the tables. Kurt walked
to the desk. A man leaned upon his elbows.
He asked Kurt if he wanted a room. This man,
evidently the proprietor, was a German, though he
spoke English.
“I’m not sure,”
replied Kurt. “Will you let me look at the
register?”
The man shoved the book around.
Kurt did not find the name he sought.
“My father, Chris Dorn, is in
town. Can you tell me where I’ll find him?”
“So you’re young Dorn,”
replied the other, with instant change to friendliness.
“I’ve heard of you. Yes, the old man
is here. He made a big wheat deal to-day.
He’s eating his supper.”
Kurt stepped to the door indicated,
and, looking into the dining-room, he at once espied
his father’s huge head with its shock of gray
hair. He appeared to be in earnest colloquy with
a man whose bulk matched his own. Kurt hesitated,
and finally went back to the desk.
“Who’s the big man with my father?”
he asked.
“He is a big man, both ways.
Don’t you know him?” rejoined the proprietor,
in a lower voice.
“I’m not sure,”
answered Kurt. The lowered tone had a significance
that decided Kurt to admit nothing.
“That’s Neuman from Ruxton,
one of the biggest wheat men in Washington.”
Kurt repressed a whistle of surprise.
Neuman was Anderson’s only rival in the great,
fertile valley. What were Neuman and Chris Dorn
doing with their heads together?
“I thought he was Neuman,”
replied Kurt, feeling his way. “Is he in
on the big deal with father?”
“Which one?” queried the
proprietor, with shrewd eyes, taking Kurt’s
measure. “You’re in on both, of course.”
“Sure. I mean the wheat
sale, not the I.W.W. deal,” replied Kurt.
He hazarded a guess with that mention of the I.W.W.
No sooner had the words passed his lips than he divined
he was on the track of sinister events.
“Your father sold out to that
Spokane miller. No, Neuman is not in on that.”
“I was surprised to hear father
had sold the wheat. Was it speculation or guarantee?”
“Old Chris guaranteed sixty
bushels. There were friends of his here who advised
against it. Did you have rain over there?”
“Fine. The wheat will go
over sixty bushels. I’m sorry I couldn’t
get here sooner.”
“When it rained you hurried
over to boost the price. Well, it’s too
late.”
“Is Glidden here?” queried Kurt, hazarding
another guess.
“Don’t talk so loud,”
warned the proprietor. “Yes, he just got
here in a car with two other men. He’s
up-stairs having supper in his room.”
“Supper!” Kurt echoed
the word, and averted his face to hide the leap of
his blood. “That reminds me, I’m hungry.”
He went into the big, dimly lighted
dining-room. There was a shelf on one side as
he went in, and here, with his back turned to the room,
he laid the disjointed gun and his hat. Several
newspapers lying near attracted his eye. Quickly
he slipped them under and around the gun, and then
took a seat at the nearest table. A buxom German
waitress came for his order. He gave it while
he gazed around at his grim-faced old father and the
burly Neuman, and his ears throbbed to the beat of
his blood. His hand trembled on the table.
His thoughts flashed almost too swiftly for comprehension.
It took a stern effort to gain self-control.
Evil of some nature was afoot.
Neuman’s presence there was a strange, disturbing
fact. Kurt had made two guesses, both alarmingly
correct. If he had any more illusions or hopes,
he dispelled them. His father had been won over
by this arch conspirator of the I.W.W. And, despite
his father’s close-fistedness where money was
concerned, that eighty thousand dollars, or part of
it, was in danger.
Kurt wondered how he could get possession
of it. If he could he would return it to the
bank and wire a warning to the Spokane buyer that the
wheat was not safe. He might persuade his father
to turn over the amount of the debt to Anderson.
While thinking and planning, Kurt kept an eye on his
father and rather neglected his supper. Presently,
when old Dorn and Neuman rose and left the dining-room,
Kurt followed them. His father was whispering
to the proprietor over the desk, and at Kurt’s
touch he glared his astonishment.
“You here! What for?” he demanded,
gruffly, in German.
“I had to see you,” replied Kurt, in English.
“Did it rain?” was the old man’s
second demand, husky and serious.
“The wheat is made, if we can harvest it,”
answered Kurt.
The blaze of joy on old Dorn’s
face gave Kurt a twinge of pain. He hated to
dispel it. “Come aside, here, a minute,”
he whispered, and drew his father over to a corner
under a lamp. “I’ve got bad news.
Look at this!” He produced the cake of phosphorus,
careful to hide it from other curious eyes there,
and with swift, low words he explained its meaning.
He expected an outburst of surprise and fury, but he
was mistaken.
“I know about that,” whispered
his father, hoarsely. “There won’t
be any thrown in my wheat.”
“Father! What assurance have you of that?”
queried Kurt, astounded.
The old man nodded his gray head wisely. He knew,
but he did not speak.
“Do you think these I.W.W. plotters
will spare your wheat?” asked Kurt. “You
are wrong. They may lie to your face. But
they’ll betray you. The I.W.W. is backed
by by interests that want to embarrass the
government.”
“What government?”
“Why, ours the U.S. government!”
“That’s not my government.
The more it’s embarrassed the better it will
suit me.”
In the stress of the moment Kurt had
forgotten his father’s bitter and unchangeable
hatred.
“But you’re you’re
stupid,” he hissed, passionately. “That
government has protected you for fifty years.”
Old Dorn growled into his beard.
His huge ox-eyes rolled. Kurt realized then finally
how implacable and hopeless he was how utterly
German. Then Kurt importuned him to return the
eighty thousand dollars to the bank until he was sure
the wheat was harvested and hauled to the railroad.
“My wheat won’t burn,” was old Dorn’s
stubborn reply.
“Well, then, give me Anderson’s
thirty thousand. I’ll take it to him at
once. Our debt will be paid. We’ll
have it off our minds.”
“No hurry about that,” replied his father.
“But there is hurry,”
returned Kurt, in a hot whisper. “Anderson
came to see you to-day. He wants his money.”
“Neuman holds the small end
of that debt. I’ll pay him. Anderson
can wait.”
Kurt felt no amaze. He expected
anything. But he could scarcely contain his fury.
How this old man, his father, whom he had loved how
he had responded to the influences that must destroy
him!
“Anderson shall not wait,”
declared Kurt. “I’ve got some say
in this matter. I’ve worked like a dog
in those wheat-fields. I’ve a right to
demand Anderson’s money. He needs it.
He has a tremendous harvest on his hands.”
Old Dorn shook his huge head in somber
and gloomy thought. His broad face, his deep
eyes, seemed to mask and to hide. It was an expression
Kurt had seldom seen there, but had always hated.
It seemed so old to Kurt, that alien look, something
not born of his time.
“Anderson is a capitalist,”
said Chris Dorn, deep in his beard. “He
seeks control of farmers and wheat in the Northwest.
Ranch after ranch he’s gained by taking up and
foreclosing mortgages. He’s against labor.
He grinds down the poor. He cheated Neuman out
of a hundred thousand bushels of wheat. He bought
up my debt. He meant to ruin me. He ”
“You’re talking I.W.W.
rot,” whispered Kurt, shaking with the effort
to subdue his feelings. “Anderson is fine,
big, square a developer of the Northwest.
Not an enemy! He’s our friend. Oh!
if only you had an American’s eyes, just for
a minute!... Father, I want that money for Anderson.”
“My son, I run my own business,”
replied Dorn, sullenly, with a pale fire in his opaque
eyes. “You’re a wild boy, unfaithful
to your blood. You’ve fallen in love with
an American girl.... Anderson says he needs money!"...
With hard, gloomy face the old man shook his head.
“He thinks he’ll harvest!” Again
that strange shake of finality. “I know
what I know.... I keep my money.... We’ll
have other rule.... I keep my money.”
Kurt had vibrated to those most significant
words and he stared speechless at his father.
“Go home. Get ready for
harvest,” suddenly ordered old Dorn, as if he
had just awakened to the fact of Kurt’s disobedience
in lingering here.
“All right, father,” replied
Kurt, and, turning on his heel, he strode outdoors.
When he got beyond the light he turned
and went back to a position where in the dark he could
watch without being seen. His father and the hotel
proprietor were again engaged in earnest colloquy.
Neuman had disappeared. Kurt saw the huge shadow
of a man pass across a drawn blind in a room up-stairs.
Then he saw smaller shadows, and arms raised in vehement
gesticulation. The very shadows were sinister.
Men passed in and out of the hotel. Once old
Dorn came to the door and peered all around.
Kurt observed that there was a dark side entrance to
this hotel. Presently Neuman returned to the
desk and said something to old Dorn, who shook his
head emphatically, and then threw himself into a chair,
in a brooding posture that Kurt knew well. He
had seen it so often that he knew it had to do with
money. His father was refusing demands of some
kind. Neuman again left the office, this time
with the proprietor. They were absent some little
time.
During this period Kurt leaned against
a tree, hidden in the shadow, with keen eyes watching
and with puzzled, anxious mind. He had determined,
in case his father left that office with Neuman, on
one of those significant disappearances, to slip into
the hotel at the side entrance and go up-stairs to
listen at the door of the room with the closely drawn
blind. Neuman returned soon with the hotel man,
and the two of them half led, half dragged old Dorn
out into the street. They took the direction
toward the railroad. Kurt followed at a safe distance
on the opposite side of the street. Soon they
passed the stores with lighted windows, then several
dark houses, and at length the railroad station.
Perhaps they were bound for the train. Kurt heard
rumbling in the distance. But they went beyond
the station, across the track, and turned to the right.
Kurt was soft-footed and keen-eyed.
He just kept the dim shadows in range. They were
heading for some freight-cars that stood upon a side-track.
The dark figures disappeared behind them. Then
one figure reappeared, coming back. Kurt crouched
low. This man passed within a few yards of Kurt
and he was whispering to himself. After he was
safely out of earshot Kurt stole on stealthily until
he reached the end of the freight-cars. Here
he paused, listening. He thought he heard low
voices, but he could not see the men he was following.
No doubt they were waiting in the secluded gloom for
the other men apparently necessary for that secret
conference. Kurt had sensed this event and he
had determined to be present. He tried not to
conjecture. It was best for him to apply all
his faculties to the task of slipping unseen and unheard
close to these men who had involved his father in
some dark plot.
Not long after Kurt hid himself on
the other side of the freight-car he heard soft-padded
footsteps and subdued voices. Dark shapes appeared
to come out of the gloom. They passed him.
He distinguished low, guttural voices, speaking German.
These men, three in number, were scarcely out of sight
when Kurt laid his rifle on the projecting shelf of
the freight-car and followed them.
Presently he came to deep shadow,
where he paused. Low voices drew him on again,
then a light made him thrill. Now and then the
light appeared to be darkened by moving figures.
A dark object loomed up to cut off Kurt’s view.
It was a pile of railroad ties, and beyond it loomed
another. Stealing along these, he soon saw the
light again, quite close. By its glow he recognized
his father’s huge frame, back to him, and the
burly Neuman on the other side, and Glidden, whose
dark face was working as he talked. These three
were sitting, evidently on a flat pile of ties, and
the other two men stood behind. Kurt could not
make out the meaning of the low voices. Pressing
closer to the freight-car, he cautiously and noiselessly
advanced.
Glidden was importuning with expressive
hands and swift, low utterance. His face gleamed
dark, hard, strong, intensely strung with corded,
quivering muscles, with eyes apparently green orbs
of fire. He spoke in German.
Kurt dared not go closer unless he
wanted to be discovered, and not yet was he ready
for that. He might hear some word to help explain
his father’s strange, significant intimations
about Anderson.
“...must have money,”
Glidden was saying. To Kurt’s eyes treachery
gleamed in that working face. Neuman bent over
to whisper gruffly in Dorn’s ear. One of
the silent men standing rubbed his hands together.
Old Dorn’s head was bowed. Then Glidden
spoke so low and so swiftly that Kurt could not connect
sentences, but with mounting blood he stood transfixed
and horrified, to gather meaning from word on word,
until he realized Anderson’s doom, with other
rich men of the Northwest, was sealed that
there were to be burnings of wheat-fields and of storehouses
and of freight-trains destruction everywhere.
“I give money,” said old
Dorn, and with heavy movement he drew from inside
his coat a large package wrapped in newspaper.
He laid it before him in the light and began to unwrap
it. Soon there were disclosed two bundles of
bills the eighty thousand dollars.
Kurt thrilled in all his being.
His poor father was being misled and robbed.
A melancholy flash of comfort came to Kurt! Then
at sight of Glidden’s hungry eyes and working
face and clutching hands Kurt pulled his hat far down,
drew his revolver, and leaped forward with a yell,
“Hands up!”
He discharged the revolver right in
the faces of the stunned plotters, and, snatching
up the bundle of money, he leaped over the light,
knocking one of the men down, and was gone into the
darkness, without having slowed in the least his swift
action.
Wheeling round the end of the freight-car,
he darted back, risking a hard fall in the darkness,
and ran along the several cars to the first one, where
he grasped his rifle and kept on. He heard his
father’s roar, like that of a mad bull, and
shrill yells from the other men. Kurt laughed
grimly. They would never catch him in the dark.
While he ran he stuffed the money into his inside
coat pockets. Beyond the railroad station he
slowed down to catch his breath. His breast was
heaving, his pulse hammering, and his skin was streaming.
The excitement was the greatest under which he had
ever labored.
“Now what shall I
do?” he panted. A freight-train was lumbering
toward him and the head-light was almost at the station.
The train appeared to be going slowly through without
stopping. Kurt hurried on down the track a little
farther. Then he waited. He would get on
that train and make his way somehow to Ruxton, there
to warn Anderson of the plot against his life.