Late in the forenoon of the next day
Kurt Dorn reached home. A hot harvest wind breathed
off the wheat-fields. It swelled his heart to
see the change in the color of that section of Bluestem the
gold had a tinge of rich, ripe brown.
Kurt’s father awaited him, a
haggard, gloomy-faced man, unkempt and hollow-eyed.
“Was it you who robbed me?” he shouted
hoarsely.
“Yes,” replied Kurt.
He had caught the eager hope and fear in the old man’s
tone. Kurt expected that confession would bring
on his father’s terrible fury, a mood to dread.
But old Dorn showed immense relief. He sat down
in his relaxation from what must have been intense
strain. Kurt saw a weariness, a shade, in the
gray lined face that had never been there before.
“What did you do with the money?” asked
the old man.
“I banked it in Kilo,”
replied Kurt. “Then I wired your miller
in Spokane.... So you’re safe if we can
harvest the wheat.”
Old Dorn nodded thoughtfully.
There had come a subtle change in him. Presently
he asked Kurt if men had been hired for the harvest.
“No. I’ve not seen
any I would trust,” replied Kurt, and then he
briefly outlined Anderson’s plan to insure a
quick and safe harvesting of the grain. Old Dorn
objected to this on account of the expense. Kurt
argued with him and patiently tried to show him the
imperative need of it. Dorn, apparently, was
not to be won over; however, he was remarkably mild
in comparison with what Kurt had expected.
“Father, do you realize now
that the men you were dealing with at Wheatly are
dishonest? I mean with you. They would betray
you.”
Old Dorn had no answer for this.
Evidently he had sustained some kind of shock that
he was not willing to admit.
“Look here, father,” went
on Kurt, in slow earnestness. He spoke in English,
because nothing would make him break his word and ever
again speak a word of German. And his father
was not quick to comprehend English. “Can’t
you see that the I.W.W. mean to cripple us wheat farmers
this harvest?”
“No,” replied old Dorn, stubbornly.
“But they do. They don’t
want work. If they accept work it is for
a chance to do damage. All this I.W.W. talk about
more wages and shorter hours is deceit. They
make a bold face of discontent. That is all a
lie. The I.W.W. is out to ruin the great wheat-fields
and the great lumber forests of the Northwest.”
“I do not believe that,”
declared his father, stoutly. “What for?”
Kurt meant to be careful of that subject.
“No matter what for. It
does not make any difference what it’s for.
We’ve got to meet it to save our wheat....
Now won’t you believe me? Won’t you
let me manage the harvest?”
“I will not believe,”
replied old Dorn, stubbornly. “Not about
my wheat. I know they mean to destroy.
They are against rich men like Anderson. But
not me or my wheat!”
“There is where you are wrong.
I’ll prove it in a very few days. But in
that time I can prepare for them and outwit them.
Will you let me?”
“Go ahead,” replied old Dorn, gruffly.
It was a concession that Kurt was
amazed and delighted to gain. And he set about
at once to act upon it. He changed his clothes
and satisfied his hunger; then, saddling his horse,
he started out to visit his farmer neighbors.
The day bade fair to be rich in experience.
Jerry, the foreman, was patrolling his long beat up
and down the highway. Jerry carried a shot-gun
and looked like a sentry. The men under him were
on the other side of the section of wheat, and the
ground was so rolling that they could not be seen
from the highway. Jerry was unmistakably glad
and relieved to see Kurt.
“Some goin’s-on,”
he declared, with a grin. “Since you left
there’s been one hundred and sixteen I.W.W.
tramps along this here road.”
“Have you had any trouble?” inquired Kurt.
“Wal, I reckon it wasn’t
trouble, but every time I took a peg at some sneak
I sort of broke out sweatin’ cold.”
“You shot at them?”
“Sure I shot when I seen any
loafin’ along in the dark. Two of them shot
back at me, an’ after thet I wasn’t particular
to aim high.... Reckon I’m about dead for
sleep.”
“I’ll relieve you to-night,”
replied Kurt. “Jerry, doesn’t the
wheat look great?”
“Wal, I reckon. An’
walkin’ along here when it’s quiet an’
no wind blowin’, I can just hear the wheat crack.
It’s gittin’ ripe fast, an’ sure
the biggest crop we ever raised.... But I’m
tellin’ you when I think how we’ll
ever harvest it my insides just sinks like lead!”
Kurt then outlined Anderson’s
plan, which was received by the foreman with eager
approval and the assurance that the neighbor farmers
would rally to his call.
Kurt found his nearest neighbor, Olsen,
cutting a thin, scarcely ripe barley. Olsen was
running a new McCormack harvester, and appeared delighted
with the machine, but cast down by the grain prospects.
He did not intend to cut his wheat at all. It
was a dead loss.
“Two sections twelve
hundred an’ eighty acres!” he repeated,
gloomily. “An’ the third bad year!
Dorn, I can’t pay the interest to my bank.”
Olsen’s sun-dried and wind-carved
visage was as hard and rugged and heroic as this desert
that had resisted him for years. Kurt saw under
the lines and the bronze all the toil and pain and
unquenchable hope that had made Olsen a type of the
men who had cultivated this desert of wheat.
“I’ll give you five hundred
dollars to help me harvest,” said Kurt, bluntly,
and briefly stated his plan.
Olsen whistled. He complimented
Anderson’s shrewd sense. He spoke glowingly
of that magnificent section of wheat that absolutely
must be saved. He promised Kurt every horse and
every man on his farm. But he refused the five
hundred dollars.
“Oh, say, you’ll have to accept it,”
declared Kurt.
“You’ve done me good turns,” asserted
Olsen.
“But nothing like this.
Why, this will be a rush job, with all the men and
horses and machines and wagons I can get. It’ll
cost ten fifteen thousand dollars to harvest
that section. Even at that, and paying Anderson,
we’ll clear twenty thousand or more. Olsen,
you’ve got to take the money.”
“All right, if you insist. I’m needin’
it bad enough,” replied Olsen.
Further conversation with Olsen gleaned
the facts that he was the only farmer in their immediate
neighborhood who did not have at least a little grain
worth harvesting. But the amount was small and
would require only slight time. Olsen named farmers
that very likely would not take kindly to Dorn’s
proposition, and had best not be approached. The
majority, however, would stand by him, irrespective
of the large wage offered, because the issue was one
to appeal to the pride of the Bend farmers. Olsen
appeared surprisingly well informed upon the tactics
of the I.W.W., and predicted that they would cause
trouble, but be run out of the country. He made
the shrewd observation that when even those farmers
who sympathized with Germany discovered that their
wheat-fields were being menaced by foreign influences
and protected by the home government, they would experience
a change of heart. Olsen said the war would be
a good thing for the United States, because they would
win it, and during the winning would learn and suffer
and achieve much.
Kurt rode away from Olsen in a more
thoughtful frame of mind. How different and interesting
the points of view of different men! Olsen had
never taken the time to become a naturalized citizen
of the United States. There had never been anything
to force him to do it. But his understanding
of the worth of the United States and his loyalty to
it were manifest in his love for his wheatlands.
In fact, they were inseparable. Probably there
were millions of pioneers, emigrants, aliens, all
over the country who were like Olsen, who needed the
fire of the crucible to mold them into a unity with
Americans. Of such, Americans were molded!
Kurt rode all day, and when, late
that night, he got home, weary and sore and choked,
he had enlisted the services of thirty-five farmers
to help him harvest the now famous section of wheat.
His father had plainly doubted the
willingness of these neighbors to abandon their own
labors, for the Bend exacted toil for every hour of
every season, whether rich or poor in yield. Likewise
he was plainly moved by the facts. His seamed
and shaded face of gloom had a moment of light.
“They will make short work of
this harvest,” he said, thoughtfully.
“I should say so,” retorted
Kurt. “We’ll harvest and haul that
grain to the railroad in just three days.”
“Impossible!” ejaculated Dorn.
“You’ll see,” declared Kurt.
“You’ll see who’s managing this harvest.”
He could not restrain his little outburst
of pride. For the moment the great overhanging
sense of calamity that for long had haunted him faded
into the background. It did seem sure that they
would save this splendid yield of wheat. How
much that meant to Kurt in freedom from
debt, in natural love of the fruition of harvest,
in the loyalty to his government! He realized
how strange and strong was the need in him to prove
he was American to the very core of his heart.
He did not yet understand that incentive, but he felt
it.
After eating dinner Kurt took his rifle and went out
to relieve Jerry.
“Only a few more days and nights!”
he exclaimed to his foreman. “Then we’ll
have all the harvesters in the country right in our
wheat.”
“Wal, a hell of a lot can happen
before then,” declared Jerry, pessimistically.
Kurt was brought back to realities
rather suddenly. But questioning Jerry did not
elicit any new or immediate cause for worry. Jerry
appeared tired out.
“You go get some sleep,” said Kurt.
“All right. Bill’s
been dividin’ this night watch with me.
I reckon he’ll be out when he wakes up,”
replied Jerry, and trudged away.
Kurt shouldered his rifle and slowly
walked along the road with a strange sense that he
was already doing army duty in protecting property
which was at once his own and his country’s.
The night was dark, cool, and quiet.
The heavens were starry bright. A faint breeze
brought the tiny crackling of the wheat. From
far distant came the bay of a hound. The road
stretched away pale and yellow into the gloom.
In the silence and loneliness and darkness, in all
around him, and far across the dry, whispering fields,
there was an invisible presence that had its affinity
in him, hovered over him shadowless and immense, and
waved in the bursting wheat. It was life.
He felt the wheat ripening. He felt it in reawakened
tenderness for his old father and in the stir of memory
of Lenore Anderson. The past active and important
hours had left little room for thought of her.
But now she came back to him, a spirit
in keeping with his steps, a shadow under the stars,
a picture of sweet, wonderful young womanhood.
His whole relation of thought toward her had undergone
some marvelous change. The most divine of gifts
had been granted him an opportunity to
save her from harm, perhaps from death. He had
served her father. How greatly he could not tell,
but if measured by the gratitude in her eyes it would
have been infinite. He recalled that expression blue,
warm, soft, and indescribably strange with its unuttered
hidden meaning. It was all-satisfying for him
to realize that she had been compelled to give him
a separate and distinct place in her mind. He
must stand apart from all others she knew. It
had been his fortune to preserve her happiness and
the happiness that she must be to sisters and mother,
and that some day she would bestow upon some lucky
man. They would all owe it to him. And Lenore
Anderson knew he loved her.
These things had transformed his relation
of thought toward her. He had no regret, no jealousy,
no fear. Even the pang of suppressed and overwhelming
love had gone with his confession.
But he did remember her presence,
her beauty, her intent blue glance, and the faint,
dreaming smile of her lips remembered them
with a thrill, and a wave of emotion, and a contraction
of his heart. He had promised to see her once
more, to afford her the opportunity, no doubt, to
thank him, to try to make him see her gratitude.
He would go, but he wished it need not be. He
asked no more. And seeing her again might change
his fulness of joy to something of pain.
So Kurt trod the long road in the
darkness and silence, pausing, and checking his dreams
now and then, to listen and to watch. He heard
no suspicious sounds, nor did he meet any one.
The night was melancholy, with a hint of fall in its
cool breath.
Soon he would be walking a beat in
one of the training-camps, with a bugle-call in his
ears and the turmoil of thousands of soldiers in the
making around him: soon, too, he would be walking
the deck of a transport, looking back down the moon-blanched
wake of the ship toward home, listening to the mysterious
moan of the ocean; and then soon feeling under his
feet the soil of a foreign country, with hideous and
incomparable war shrieking its shell furies and its
man anguish all about him. But no matter how
far away he ever got, he knew Lenore Anderson would
be with him as she was there on that dim, lonely starlit
country road.
And in these long hours of his vigil
Kurt Dorn divined a relation between his love for
Lenore Anderson and a terrible need that had grown
upon him. A need of his heart and his soul!
More than he needed her, if even in his wildest dreams
he had permitted himself visions of an earthly paradise,
he needed to prove to his blood and his spirit that
he was actually and truly American. He had no
doubt of his intelligence, his reason, his choice.
The secret lay hidden in the depths of him, and he
knew it came from the springs of the mother who had
begotten him. His mother had given him birth,
and by every tie he was mostly hers.
Kurt had been in college during the
first year of the world war. And his name, his
fair hair and complexion, his fluency in German, and
his remarkable efficiency in handicrafts had opened
him to many a hint, many a veiled sarcasm that had
stung him like a poison brand. There was injustice
in all this war spirit. It changed the minds of
men and women. He had not doubted himself until
those terrible scenes with his father, and, though
he had reacted to them as an American, he had felt
the drawing, burning blood tie. He hated everything
German and he knew he was wrong in doing so.
He had clear conception in his mind of the difference
between the German war motives and means, and those
of the other nations.
Kurt’s problem was to understand
himself. His great fight was with his own soul.
His material difficulties and his despairing love had
suddenly been transformed, so that they had lent his
spirit wings. How many poor boys and girls in
America must be helplessly divided between parents
and country! How many faithful and blind parents,
obedient to the laws of mind and heart, set for all
time, must see a favorite son go out to fight against
all they had held sacred!
That was all bad enough, but Kurt
had more to contend with. No illusions had he
of a chastened German spirit, a clarified German mind,
an unbrutalized German heart. Kurt knew his father.
What would change his father? Nothing but death!
Death for himself or death for his only son!
Kurt had an incalculable call to prove forever to himself
that he was free. He had to spill his own blood
to prove himself, or he had to spill that of an enemy.
And he preferred that it should be his own. But
that did not change a vivid and terrible picture which
haunted him at times. He saw a dark, wide, and
barren shingle of the world, a desert of desolation
made by man, where strange, windy shrieks and thundering
booms and awful cries went up in the night, and where
drifting palls of smoke made starless sky, and bursts
of reddish fires made hell.
Suddenly Kurt’s slow pacing
along the road was halted, as was the trend of his
thought. He was not sure he had heard a sound.
But he quivered all over. The night was far advanced
now; the wind was almost still; the wheat was smooth
and dark as the bosom of a resting sea. Kurt listened.
He imagined he heard, far away, the faint roar of an
automobile. But it might have been a train on
the railroad. Sometimes on still nights he caught
sounds like that.
Then a swish in the wheat, a soft
thud, very low, unmistakably came to Kurt’s
ear. He listened, turning his ear to the wind.
Presently he heard it again a sound relating
both to wheat and earth. In a hot flash he divined
that some one had thrown fairly heavy bodies into the
wheat-fields. Phosphorus cakes! Kurt held
his breath while he peered down the gloomy road, his
heart pounding, his hands gripping the rifle.
And when he descried a dim form stealthily coming toward
him he yelled, “Halt!”
Instantly the form wavered, moved
swiftly, with quick pad of footfalls. Kurt shot
once twice three times and
aimed as best he could to hit. The form either
fell or went on out of sight in the gloom. Kurt
answered the excited shouts of his men, calling them
to come across to him. Then he went cautiously
down the road, peering on the ground for a dark form.
But he failed to find it, and presently had to admit
that in the dark his aim had been poor. Bill
came out to relieve Kurt, and together they went up
and down the road for a mile without any glimpse of
a skulking form. It was almost daylight when
Kurt went home to get a few hours’ sleep.