Lenore awakened early. The morning
seemed golden. Birds were singing at her window.
What did that day hold in store for her? She pressed
a hand hard on her heart as if to hold it still.
But her heart went right on, swift, exultant, throbbing
with a fullness that was almost pain.
Early as she awakened, it was, nevertheless,
late when she could direct her reluctant steps down-stairs.
She had welcomed every little suggestion and task
to delay the facing of her ordeal.
There was merriment in the sitting-room,
and Dorn’s laugh made her glad. The girls
were at him, and her father’s pleasant, deep
voice chimed in. Evidently there was a controversy
as to who should have the society of the guest.
They had all been to breakfast. Mrs. Anderson
expressed surprise at Lenore’s tardiness, and
said she had been called twice. Lenore had heard
nothing except the birds and the music of her thoughts.
She peeped into the sitting-room.
“Didn’t you bring me anything?”
Kathleen was inquiring of Dorn.
Dorn was flushed and smiling.
Anderson stood beaming upon them, and Rose appeared
to be inclined toward jealousy.
“Why you see I
didn’t even know Lenore had a little sister,”
Dorn explained.
“Oh!” exclaimed Kathleen,
evidently satisfied. “All Lenorry’s
beaux bring me things. But I believe I’m
going to like you best.”
Lenore had intended to say good morning.
She changed her mind, however, at Kathleen’s
naïve speech, and darted back lest she be seen.
She felt the blood hot in her cheeks. That awful,
irrepressible Kathleen! If she liked Dorn she
would take possession of him. And Kathleen was
lovable, irresistible. Lenore had a sudden thought
that Kathleen would aid the good cause if she could
be enlisted. While Lenore ate her breakfast she
listened to the animated conversation in the sitting-room.
Presently her father came in.
“Hello, Lenore! Did you
get up?” he greeted her, cheerily.
“I hardly ever did, it seems....
Dad, the day was something to face,” she said.
“Ah-huh! It’s like
getting up to work. Lenore, the biggest duty of
life is to hide your troubles.... Dorn looks
like a human bein’ this mornin’.
The kids have won him. I reckon he needs that
sort of cheer. Let them have him. Then after
a while you fetch him out to the wheat-field.
Lenore, our harvestin’ is half done. Every
day I’ve expected some trick or deviltry.
But it hasn’t come yet.”
“Are any of the other ranchers
having trouble?” she inquired.
“I hear rumors of bad work.
But facts told by ranchers an’ men who were
here only yesterday make little of the rumors.
All that burnin’ of wheat an’ timber,
an’ the destruction of machines an’ strikin’
of farm-hands, haven’t hit Golden Valley yet.
We won’t need any militia here, you can bet
on that.”
“Father, it won’t do to
be over-confident,” she said, earnestly.
“You know you are the mark for the I.W.W. sabotage.
If you are not careful any moment ”
Lenore paused with a shudder.
“Lass, I’m just like I
was in the old rustlin’ days. An’
I’ve surrounded myself with cowboys like Jake
an’ Bill, an’ old hands who pack guns an’
keep still, as in the good old Western days. We’re
just waitin’ for the I.W.W.’s to break
loose.”
“Then what?” queried Lenore.
“Wal, we’ll chase that
outfit so fast it’ll be lost in dust,”
he replied.
“But if you chase them away,
it ’ll only be into another state, where they’ll
make trouble for other farmers. You don’t
do any real good.”
“My dear, I reckon you’ve
said somethin’ strong,” he replied, soberly,
and went out.
Then Kathleen came bouncing in.
Her beautiful eyes were full of mischief and excitement.
“Lenorry, your new beau has all the others skinned
to a frazzle,” she said.
For once Lenore did not scold Kathleen,
but drew her close and whispered: “Do you
want to please me? Do you want me to do everything
for you?”
“I sure do,” replied Kathleen, with wonderful
eyes.
“Then be nice, sweet, good to
him.... make him love you.... Don’t tease
him about my other beaux. Think how you can make
him like ’Many Waters.’”
“Will you promise everything?”
whispered Kathleen, solemnly. Evidently Lenore’s
promises were rare and reliable.
“Yes. Cross my heart. There!
And you must not tell.”
Kathleen was a precocious child, with
all the potentialities of youth. She could not
divine Lenore’s motive, but she sensed a new
and fascinating mode of conduct for herself.
She seemed puzzled a little at Lenore’s earnestness.
“It’s a bargain,”
she said, soberly, as if she had accepted no slight
gauge.
“Now, Kathleen, take him all
over the gardens, the orchards, the corrals and barns,”
directed Lenore. “Be sure to show him the
horses my horses, especially. Take
him round the reservoir and everywhere except
the wheat-fields. I want to take him there myself.
Besides, father does not want you girls to go out
to the harvest.”
Kathleen nodded and ran back to the
sitting-room. Lenore heard them all go out together.
Before she finished breakfast her mother came in again.
“Lenore, I like Mr. Dorn,”
she said, meditatively. “He has an old-fashioned
manner that reminds me of my boy friends when I was
a girl. I mean he’s more courteous and
dignified than boys are nowadays. A splendid-looking
boy, too. Only his face is so sad. When he
smiles he seems another person.”
“No wonder he’s sad,”
replied Lenore, and briefly told Kurt Dorn’s
story.
“Ah!” sighed Mrs. Anderson.
“We have fallen upon evil days.... Poor
boy!... Your father seems much interested in him.
And you are too, my daughter?”
“Yes, I am,” replied Lenore, softly.
Two hours later she heard Kathleen’s
gay laughter and pattering feet. Lenore took
her wide-brimmed hat and went out on the porch.
Dorn was indeed not the same somber young man he had
been.
“Good morning, Kurt,” said Lenore, extending
her hand.
The instant he greeted her she saw
the stiffness, the aloofness had gone from him.
Kathleen had made him feel at home. He looked
younger. There was color in his face.
“Kathleen, I’ll take charge
of Mr. Dorn now, if you will allow me that pleasure.”
“Lenorry, I sure hate to give
him up. We sure had a fine time.”
“Did he like ’Many Waters’?”
“Well, if he didn’t he’s
a grand fibber,” replied Kathleen. “But
he did. You can’t fool me. I thought
I’d never get him back to the house.”
Then, as she tripped up the porch steps, she shook
a finger at Dorn. “Remember!”
“I’ll never forget,”
said Dorn, and he was as earnest as he was amiable.
Then, as she disappeared, he exclaimed to Lenore, “What
an adorable little girl!”
“Do you like Kathleen?”
“Like her!” Dorn laughed
in a way to make light of such words. “My
life has been empty. I see that.”
“Come, we’ll go out to
the wheat-fields,” said Lenore. “What
do you think of ‘Many Waters’? This
is harvest-time. You see ‘Many Waters’
at its very best.”
“I can hardly tell you,”
he replied. “All my life I’ve lived
on my barren hills. I seem to have come to another
world. ‘Many Waters’ is such a ranch
as I never dreamed of. The orchards, the fruit,
the gardens and everywhere running water!
It all smells so fresh and sweet. And then the
green and red and purple against that background of
blazing gold!... ‘Many Waters’ is
verdant and fruitful. The Bend is desert.”
“Now that you’ve been
here, do you like it better than your barren hills?”
asked Lenore.
Kurt hesitated. “I don’t
know,” he answered, slowly. “But maybe
that desert I’ve lived in accounts for much
I lack.”
“Would you like to stay at ’Many
Waters’ if you weren’t going
to war?”
“I might prefer ‘Many
Waters’ to any place on earth. It’s
a paradise. But I would not chose to stay here.”
“Why? When you return you
know my father will need you here.
And if anything should happen to him I will have to
run the ranch. Then I would need you.”
Dorn stopped in his tracks and gazed
at her as if there were slight misgivings in his mind.
“Lenore, if you owned this ranch
would you want me me for your manager?”
he asked, bluntly.
“Yes,” she replied.
“You would? Knowing I was in love with
you?”
“Well, I had forgotten that,”
she replied, with a little laugh. “It would
be rather embarrassing and funny, wouldn’t
it?”
“Yes, it would,” he said,
grimly, and walked on again. He made a gesture
of keen discomfiture. “I knew you hadn’t
taken me seriously.”
“I believed you, but I could
not take you very seriously,” she murmured.
“Why not?” he demanded,
as if stung, and his eyes flashed on her.
“Because your declaration was
not accompanied by the usual question that
a girl naturally expects under such circumstances.”
“Good Heaven! You say that?...
Lenore Anderson, you think me insincere because I
did not ask you to marry me,” he asserted, with
bitter pathos.
“No. I merely said you
were not very serious,” she
replied. It was fascination to torment him this
way, yet it hurt her, too. She was playing on
the verge of a precipice, not afraid of a misstep,
but glorying in the prospect of a leap into the abyss.
Something deep and strange in her bade her make him
show her how much he loved her. If she drove
him to desperation she would reward him.
“I am going to war,” he
began, passionately, “to fight for you and your
sisters.... I am ruined.... The only noble
and holy feeling left to me that I can
have with me in the dark hours is my love
for you. If you do not believe that, I am indeed
the most miserable of beggars! Most boys going
to the front leave many behind whom they love.
I have no one but you.... don’t make me a coward.”
“I believe you. Forgive me,” she
said.
“If I had asked you to marry
me me why, I’d have
been a selfish, egotistical fool. You are far
above me. And I want you to know I know it....
But even if I had not had the blood I have even
if I had been prosperous instead of ruined, I’d
never have asked you, unless I came back whole from
the war.”
They had been walking out the lane
during this conversation and had come close to the
wheat-field. The day was hot, but pleasant, the
dry wind being laden with harvest odors. The
hum of the machines was like the roar in a flour-mill.
“If you go to war and
come back whole ?” began Lenore, tantalizingly.
She meant to have no mercy upon him. It was incredible
how blind he was. Yet how glad that made her.
He resembled his desert hills, barren of many little
things, but rich in hidden strength, heroic of mold.
“Then just to add one more to
the conquests girls love I’ll I’ll
propose to you,” he declared, banteringly.
“Beware, boy! I might accept you,”
she exclaimed.
His play was short-lived. He could not be gay,
even under her influence.
“Please don’t jest,”
he said, frowning. “Can’t we talk
of something besides love and war?”
“They seem to be popular just
now,” she replied, audaciously. “Anyway,
all’s fair you know.”
“No, it is not fair,”
he returned, low-voiced and earnest. “So
once for all let me beg of you, don’t jest.
Oh, I know you’re sweet. You’re full
of so many wonderful, surprising words and looks.
I can’t understand you.... But I beg of
you, don’t make me a fool!”
“Well, if you pay such compliments
and if I want them what then?
You are very original, very gallant, Mr. Kurt Dorn,
and I I rather like you.”
“I’ll get angry with you,” he threatened.
“You couldn’t....
I’m the only girl you’re going to leave
behind and if you got angry I’d never
write to you.”
It thrilled Lenore and wrung her heart
to see how her talk affected him. He was in a
torment. He believed she spoke lightly, girlishly,
to tease him that she was only a gay-hearted
girl, fancy-free and just a little proud of her conquest
over even him.
“I surrender. Say what
you like,” he said, resignedly. “I’ll
stand anything just to get your letters.”
“If you go I’ll write
as often as you want me to,” she replied.
With that they emerged upon the harvest-field.
Machines and engines dotted the golden slope, and
wherever they were located stood towering straw-stacks.
Horses and men and wagons were strung out as far as
the eye could see. Long streams of chaff and
dust and smoke drifted upward.
“Lenore, there’s trouble
in the very air,” said Dorn. “Look!”
She saw a crowd of men gathering round
one of the great combine-harvesters. Some one
was yelling.
“Let’s stay away from
trouble,” replied Lenore. “We’ve
enough of our own.”
“I’m going over there,”
declared Dorn. “Perhaps you’d better
wait for me or go back.”
“Well! You’re the first boy who ever ”
“Come on,” he interrupted,
with grim humor. “I’d rather enjoy
your seeing me break loose as I will if
there’s any I.W.W. trickery.”
Before they got to the little crowd
Lenore both heard and saw her father. He was
in a rage and not aware of her presence. Jake
and Bill, the cowboys, hovered over him. Anderson
strode to and fro, from one side of the harvester
to the other. Lenore did not recognize any of
the harvest-hands, and even the driver was new to
her. They were not a typical Western harvest
crew, that was certain. She did not like their
sullen looks, and Dorn’s muttered imprecation,
the moment he neared them, confirmed her own opinion.
Anderson’s foreman stood gesticulating,
pale and anxious of face.
“No, I don’t hold you
responsible,” roared the rancher. “But
I want action.... I want to know why this machine’s
broke down.”
“It was in perfect workin’
order,” declared the foreman. “I don’t
know why it broke down.”
“That’s the fourth machine
in two days. No accident, I tell you,”
shouted Anderson. Then he espied Dorn and waved
a grimy hand. “Come here, Dorn,”
he called, and stepped out of the group of dusty men.
“Somethin’ wrong here. This new harvester’s
broke down. It’s a McCormack an’
new to us. But it has worked great an’ I
jest believe it’s been tampered with...
Do you know these McCormack harvesters?”
“Yes. They’re reliable,” replied
Dorn.
“Ah-huh! Wal, get your coat off an’
see what’s been done to this one.”
Dorn took off his coat and was about
to throw it down, when Lenore held out her hand for
it.
“Unhitch the horses,” said Dorn.
Anderson gave this order, which was
complied with. Then Dorn disappeared around or
under the big machine.
“Lenore, I’ll bet he tells
us somethin’ in a minute,” said Anderson
to her. “These new claptraps are beyond
me. I’m no mechanic.”
“Dad, I don’t like the
looks of your harvest-hands,” whispered Lenore.
“Wal, this is a sample of the
lot I hired. No society for you, my lass!”
“I’m going to stay now,” she replied.
Dorn appeared to be raising a racket
somewhere out of sight under or inside the huge harvester.
Rattling and rasping sounds, creaks and cracks, attested
to his strong and impatiently seeking hands.
Presently he appeared. His white
shirt had been soiled by dust and grease. There
was chaff in his fair hair. In one grimy hand
he held a large monkey-wrench. What struck Lenore
most was the piercing intensity of his gaze as he
fixed it upon her father.
“Anderson, I knew right where
to find it,” he said, in a sharp, hard voice.
“This monkey-wrench was thrown upon the platform,
carried to the elevator into the thresher....
Your machine is torn to pieces inside out
of commission!”
“Ah-huh!” exclaimed Anderson,
as if the truth was a great relief.
“Where’d that monkey-wrench
come from?” asked the foreman, aghast. “It’s
not ours. I don’t buy that kind.”
Anderson made a slight, significant
motion to the cowboys. They lined up beside him,
and, like him, they looked dangerous.
“Come here, Kurt,” he
said, and then, putting Lenore before him, he moved
a few steps aside, out of earshot of the shifty-footed
harvest-hands. “Say, you called the turn
right off, didn’t you?”
“Anderson, I’ve had a
hard experience, all in one harvest-time,” replied
Dorn. “I’ll bet you I can find out
who threw this wrench into your harvester.”
“I don’t doubt you, my lad. But how?”
“It had to be thrown by one
of these men near the machine. That harvester
hasn’t run twenty feet from where the trick was
done.... Let these men face me. I’ll
find the guilty one.”
“Wait till we get Lenore out
of the way,” replied Anderson
“Boss, me an’ Bill can
answer fer thet outfit as it stands, an’
no risks fer nobody,” put in Jake, coolly.
Anderson’s reply was cut short
by a loud explosion. It frightened Lenore.
She imagined one of the steam-engines had blown up.
“That thresher’s on fire,”
shouted Dorn, pointing toward a big machine that was
attached by an endless driving belt to an engine.
The workmen, uttering yells and exclamations,
ran toward the scene of the new accident, leaving
Anderson, his daughter, and the foreman behind.
Smoke was pouring out of the big harvester. The
harvest-hands ran wildly around, shouting and calling,
evidently unable to do anything. The line of
wagons full of wheat-sheaves broke up; men dragged
at the plunging horses. Then flame followed the
smoke out of the thresher.
“I’ve heard of threshers
catchin’ fire,” said Anderson, as if dumfounded,
“but I never seen one.... Now how on earth
did that happen?”
“Another trick, Anderson,”
replied Dorn. “Some I.W.W. has stuffed a
handful of matches into a wheat-sheaf. Or maybe
a small bomb!”
“Ah-huh!... Come on, let’s
go over an’ see my money burn up.... Kurt,
I’m gettin’ some new education these days.”
Dorn appeared to be unable to restrain
himself. He hurried on ahead of the others.
And Anderson whispered to Lenore, “I’ll
bet somethin’s comin’ off!”
This alarmed Lenore, yet it also thrilled her.
The threshing-machine burned like
a house of cards. Farm-hands came running from
all over the field. But nothing, manifestly, could
be done to save the thresher. Anderson, holding
his daughter’s arm, calmly watched it burn.
There was excitement all around; it had not been communicated,
however, to the rancher. He looked thoughtful.
The foreman darted among the groups of watchers and
his distress was very plain. Dorn had gotten
out of sight. Lenore still held his coat and wondered
what he was doing. She was thoroughly angry and
marveled at her father’s composure. The
big thresher was reduced to a blazing, smoking hulk
in short order.
Dorn came striding up. His face
was pale and his mouth set.
“Mr. Anderson, you’ve
got to make a strong stand and quick,”
he said, deliberately.
“I reckon. An’ I’m
ready, if it’s the right time,” replied
the rancher. “But what can we prove?”
“That’s proof,”
declared Dorn, pointing at the ruined thresher.
“Do you know all your honest hands?”
“Yes, an’ I’ve got
enough to clean up this outfit in no time. We’re
only waitin’.”
“What for?”
“Wal, I reckon for what’s just come off.”
“Don’t let them go any
farther.... Look at these fellows. Can’t
you tell the I.W.W.’s from the others?”
“No, I can’t unless I count all the new
harvest-hands I.W.W.’s.”
“Every one you don’t know
here is in with that gang,” declared Dorn, and
he waved a swift hand at the groups. His eyes
swept piercingly over, and apparently through, the
men nearest at hand.
At this juncture Jake and Bill, with
two other cowboys, strode up to Anderson.
“Another accident, boss,”
said Jake, sarcastically. “Ain’t it
about time we corralled some of this outfit?”
Anderson did not reply. He had
suddenly imitated Lenore, who had become solely bent
upon Dorn’s look. That indeed was cause
for interest. It was directed at a member of
the nearest group a man in rough garb, with
slouch-hat pulled over his eyes. As Lenore looked
she saw this man, suddenly becoming aware of Dorn’s
scrutiny, hastily turn and walk away.
“Hold on!” called Dorn,
his voice a ringing command. It halted every
moving person on that part of the field. Then
Dorn actually bounded across the intervening space.
“Come on, boys,” said
Anderson, “get in this. Dorn’s spotted
some one, an’ now that’s all we want....
Lenore, stick close behind me. Jake, you keep
near her.”
They moved hastily to back up Dorn,
who had already reached the workman he had halted.
Anderson took out a whistle and blew such a shrill
blast that it deafened Lenore, and must have been
heard all over the harvest-field. Not improbably
that was a signal agreed upon between Anderson and
his men. Lenore gathered that all had been in
readiness for a concerted movement and that her father
believed Dorn’s action had brought the climax.
“Haven’t I seen you before?” queried
Dorn, sharply.
The man shook his head and kept it
bent a little, and then he began to edge back nearer
to the stragglers, who slowly closed into a group
behind him. He seemed nervous, shifty.
“He can’t speak English,” spoke
up one of them, gruffly.
Dorn looked aggressive and stern.
Suddenly his hand flashed out to snatch off the slouch-hat
which hid the fellow’s face. Amazingly,
a gray wig came with it. This man was not old.
He had fair thick hair.
For a moment Dorn gazed at the slouch-hat
and wig. Then with a fierce action he threw them
down and swept a clutching hand for the man. The
fellow dodged and, straightening up, he reached for
a gun. But Dorn lunged upon him. Then followed
a hard grappling sound and a hoarse yell. Something
bright glinted in the sun. It made a sweeping
circle, belched fire and smoke. The report stunned
Lenore. She shut her eyes and clung to her father.
She heard cries, a scuffling, sodden blows.
“Jake! Bill!” called
Anderson. “Hold on! No gun-play yet!
Dorn’s makin’ hash out of that fellow....
But watch the others sharp!”
Then Lenore looked again. Dorn
had twisted the man around and was in the act of stripping
off the further disguise of beard, disclosing the pale
and convulsed face of a comparatively young man.
"Glidden!" burst out Dorn.
His voice had a terrible ring of furious amaze.
His whole body seemed to gather as in a knot and then
to spring. The man called Glidden went down before
that onslaught, and his gun went flying aside.
Three of Glidden’s group started
for it. The cowboy Bill leaped forward, a gun
in each hand. “Hyar!... Back!”
he yelled. And then all except the two struggling
principals grew rigid.
Lenore’s heart was burning in
her throat. The movements of Dorn were too swift
for her sight. But Glidden she saw handled as
if by a giant. Up and down he seemed thrown,
with bloody face, flinging arms, while he uttered
hoarse bawls. Dorn’s form grew more distinct.
It plunged and swung in frenzied energy. Lenore
heard men running and yells from all around.
Her father spread wide his arm before her, so that
she had to bend low to see. He shouted a warning.
Jake was holding a gun thrust forward.
“Boss, he’s goin’
to kill Glidden!” said the cowboy, in a low tone.
Anderson’s reply was incoherent,
but its meaning was plain.
Lenore’s lips and tongue almost
denied her utterance. “Oh!... Don’t
let him!”
The crowd behind the wrestling couple
swayed back and forth, and men changed places here
and there. Bill strode across the space, guns
leveled. Evidently this action was due to the
threatening movements of several workmen who crouched
as if to leap on Dorn as he whirled in his fight with
Glidden.
“Wal, it’s about time!”
yelled Anderson, as a number of lean, rangy men, rushing
from behind, reached Bill’s side, there to present
an armed and threatening front.
All eyes now centered on Dorn and
Glidden. Lenore, seeing clearly for the first
time, suffered a strange, hot paroxysm of emotion never
before experienced by her. It left her weak.
It seemed to stultify the cry that had been trying
to escape her. She wanted to scream that Dorn
must not kill the man. Yet there was a ferocity
in her that froze the cry. Glidden’s coat
and blouse were half torn off; blood covered him; he
strained and flung himself weakly in that iron clutch.
He was beaten and bent back. His tongue hung
out, bloody, fluttering with strangled cries.
A ghastly face, appalling in its fear of death!
Lenore broke her mute spell of mingled
horror and passion.
“For God’s sake, don’t let Dorn
kill him!” she implored.
“Why not?” muttered Anderson.
“That’s Glidden. He killed Dorn’s
father burned his wheat ruined
him!”
“Dad for my sake!”
she cried brokenly.
“Jake, stop him!” yelled Anderson.
“Pull him off!”
As Lenore saw it, with eyes again
half failing her, Jake could not separate Dorn from
his victim.
“Leggo, Dorn!” he yelled.
“You’re cheatin’ the gallows!...Hey,
Bill, he’s a bull!... Help, hyar quick!”
Lenore did not see the resulting conflict,
but she could tell by something that swayed the crowd
when Glidden had been freed.
“Hold up this outfit!”
yelled Anderson to his men. “Come on, Jake,
drag him along.” Jake appeared, leading
the disheveled and wild-eyed Dorn. “Son,
you did my heart good, but there was some around here
who didn’t want you to spill blood. An’
that’s well. For I am seein’ red....Jake,
you take Dorn an’ Lenore a piece toward the house,
then hurry back.”
Then Lenore felt that she had hold
of Dorn’s arm and she was listening to Jake
without understanding a word he said, while she did
hear her father’s yell of command, “Line
up there, you I.W.W.’s!”
Jake walked so swiftly that Lenore
had to run to keep up. Dorn stumbled. He
spoke incoherently. He tried to stop. At
this Lenore clasped his arm and cried, “Oh,
Kurt, come home with me!”
They hurried down the slope.
Lenore kept looking back. The crowd appeared
bunched now, with little motion. That relieved
her. There was no more fighting.
Presently Dorn appeared to go more
willingly. He had relaxed. “Let go,
Jake,” he said. “I’m all
right now. That arm hurts.”
“Wal, you’ll excuse me,
Dorn, for handlin’ you rough.... Mebbe you
don’t remember punchin’ me one when I
got between you an’ Glidden?”
“Did I?... I couldn’t
see, Jake,” said Dorn. His voice was weak
and had a spent ring of passion in it. He did
not look at Lenore, but kept his face turned toward
the cowboy.
“I reckon this ’s fur
enough,” rejoined Jake, halting and looking back.
“No one comin’. An’ there’ll
be hell to pay out there. You go on to the house
with Miss Lenore.... Will you?”
“Yes,” replied Dorn.
“Rustle along, then....
An’ you, Miss Lenore, don’t you worry none
about us.”
Lenore nodded and, holding Dorn’s
arm closely, she walked as fast as she could down
the lane.
“I I kept your coat,”
she said, “though I never thought of it till
just now.”
She was trembling all over, hot and
cold by turns, afraid to look up at him, yet immensely
proud of him, with a strange, sickening dread.
He walked rather dejectedly now, or else bent somewhat
from weakness. She stole a quick glance at his
face. It was white as a sheet. Suddenly she
felt something wet and warm trickle from his arm down
into her hand. Blood! She shuddered, but
did not lose her hold. After a faintish instant
there came a change in her.
“Are you hurt?” she asked.
“I guess not. I don’t
know,” he said.
“But the the blood,” she faltered.
He held up his hands. His knuckles
were bloody and it was impossible to tell whether
from injury to them or not. But his left forearm
was badly cut.
“The gun cut me.... And
he bit me, too,” said Dorn. “I’m
sorry you were there.... What a beastly spectacle
for you!”
“Never mind me,” she murmured.
“I’m all right now!... But,
oh! ”
She broke off eloquently.
“Was it you who had the cowboys
pull me off him? Jake said, as he broke me loose,
‘For Miss Lenore’s sake!’”
“It was dad who sent them. But I begged
him to.”
“That was Glidden, the I.W.W.
agitator and German agent.... He just
the same as murdered my father.... He burned
my wheat lost my all!”
“Yes, I I know, Kurt,” whispered
Lenore.
“I meant to kill him!”
“That was easy to tell....
Oh, thank God, you did not!... Come, don’t
let us stop.” She could not face the piercing,
gloomy eyes that went through her.
“Why should you care?.... Some one will
have to kill Glidden.”
“Oh, do not talk so,”
she implored. “Surely, now you’re
glad you did not?”
“I don’t understand myself.
But I’m certainly sorry you were there....
There’s a beast in men in me!...
I had a gun in my pocket. But do you think I’d
have used it?... I wanted to feel his flesh tear,
his bones break, his blood spurt ”
“Kurt!”
“Yes!... That was the Hun in me!”
he declared, in sudden bitter passion.
“Oh, my friend, do not talk
so!” she cried. “You make me Oh,
there is no Hun in you!”
“Yes, that’s what ails me!”
“There is not!”
she flashed back, roused to passion. “You
had been made desperate. You acted as any wronged
man! You fought. He tried to kill you.
I saw the gun. No one could blame you....
I had my own reason for begging dad to keep you from
killing him a selfish woman’s reason!...
But I tell you I was so furious so wrought
up that if it had been any man but you he
should have killed him!”
“Lenore, you’re beyond
my understanding,” replied Dorn, with emotion.
“But I thank you for excusing me for
standing up for me.”
“It was nothing....Oh, how you
bleed!.... Doesn’t that hurt?”
“I’ve no pain no
feeling at all except a sort of dying down
in me of what must have been hell.”
They reached the house and went in.
No one was there, which fact relieved Lenore.
“I’m glad mother and the
girls won’t see you,” she said, hurriedly.
“Go up to your room. I’ll bring bandages.”
He complied without any comment.
Lenore searched for what she needed to treat a wound
and ran up-stairs. Dorn was sitting on a chair
in his room, holding his arm, from which blood dripped
to the floor. He smiled at her.
“You would be a pretty Red Cross nurse,”
he said.
Lenore placed a bowl of water on the
floor and, kneeling beside Dorn, took his arm and
began to bathe it. He winced. The blood covered
her fingers.
“My blood on your hands!”
he exclaimed, morbidly. “German blood!”
“Kurt, you’re out of your
head,” retorted Lenore, hotly. “If
you dare to say that again I’ll ”
She broke off.
“What will you do?”
Lenore faltered. What would she
do? A revelation must come, sooner or later,
and the strain had begun to wear upon her. She
was stirred to her depths, and instincts there were
leaping. No sweet, gentle, kindly sympathy would
avail with this tragic youth. He must be carried
by storm. Something of the violence he had shown
with Glidden seemed necessary to make him forget himself.
All his whole soul must be set in one direction.
He could not see that she loved him, when she had looked
it, acted it, almost spoken it. His blindness
was not to be endured.
“Kurt Dorn, don’t dare to to
say that again!”
She ceased bathing his arm, and looked up at him suddenly
quite pale.
“I apologize. I am only
bitter,” he said. “Don’t mind
what I say.... It’s so good of you to
do this.”
Then in silence Lenore dressed his
wound, and if her heart did beat unwontedly, her fingers
were steady and deft. He thanked her, with moody
eyes seeing far beyond her.
“When I lie over there with ”
“If you go!” she interrupted.
He was indeed hopeless. “I advise you to
rest a little.”
“I’d like to know what becomes of Glidden,”
he said.
“So should I. That worries me.”
“Weren’t there a lot of cowboys with guns?”
“So many that there’s
no need for you to go out and start another
fight.”
“I did start it, didn’t I?”
“You surely did,” She
left him then, turning in the doorway to ask him please
to be quiet and let the day go by without seeking those
excited men again. He smiled, but he did not
promise.
For Lenore the time dragged between
dread and suspense. From her window she saw a
motley crowd pass down the lane to the main road.
No harvesters were working. At the noon meal
only her mother and the girls were present. Word
had come that the I.W.W. men were being driven from
“Many Waters.” Mrs. Anderson worried,
and Lenore’s sisters for once were quiet.
All afternoon the house was lifeless. No one came
or left. Lenore listened to every little sound.
It relieved her that Dorn had remained in his room.
Her hope was that the threatened trouble had been averted,
but something told her that the worst was yet to come.
It was nearly supper-time when she
heard the men returning. They came in a body,
noisy and loitering, as if reluctant to break away
from one another. She heard the horses tramp
into the barns and the loud voices of drivers.
When she went down-stairs she encountered
her father. He looked impressive, triumphant!
His effort at evasion did not deceive Lenore.
But she realized at once that in this instance she
could not get any news from him. He said everything
was all right and that I.W.W. men were to be deported
from Washington. But he did not want any supper,
and he had a low-voiced, significant interview with
Dorn. Lenore longed to know what was pending.
Dorn’s voice, when he said at his door, “Anderson,
I’ll go!” was ringing, hard, and deadly.
It frightened Lenore. Go where? What were
they going to do? Lenore thought of the vigilantes
her father had organized.
Supper-time was an ordeal. Dorn
ate a little; then excusing himself, he went back
to his room. Lenore got through the meal somehow,
and, going outside, she encountered Jake. The
moment she questioned him she knew something extraordinary
had taken place or was about to take place. She
coaxed and entreated. For once Jake was hard to
manage. But the more excuses he made, the more
he evaded her, the greater became Lenore’s need
to know. And at last she wore the cowboy out.
He could not resist her tears, which began to flow
in spite of her.
“See hyar, Miss Lenore, I reckon
you care a heap fer young Dorn beggin’
your pardon?” queried Jake.
“Care for him!... Jake, I love him.”
“Then take a hunch from me an’ keep him
home with you to-night.”
“Does father want Kurt Dorn to go wherever
he’s going?”
“Wal, I should smile! Your
dad likes the way Dorn handles I.W.W.’s,”
replied Jake, significantly.
“Vigilantes!” whispered Lenore.