A dusty motor-car climbed the long
road leading up to the Neuman ranch. It was not
far from Wade, a small hamlet of the wheat-growing
section, and the slopes of the hills, bare and yellow
with waving grain, bore some semblance to the Bend
country. Four men a driver and three
cowboys were in the automobile.
A big stone gate marked the entrance
to Neuman’s ranch. Cars and vehicles lined
the roadside. Men were passing in and out.
Neuman’s home was unpretentious, but his barns
and granaries and stock-houses were built on a large
scale.
“Bill, are you goin’ in
with me after this pard of the Kaiser’s?”
inquired Jake, leisurely stretching himself as the
car halted. He opened the door and stiffly got
out. “Gimme a hoss any day fer gittin’
places!”
“Jake, my regard fer
your rep as Anderson’s foreman makes me want
to hug the background,” replied Bill. “I’ve
done a hell of a lot these last forty-eight hours.”
“Wal, I reckon you have, Bill,
an’ no mistake.... But I was figgerin’
on you wantin’ to see the fun.”
“Fun!... Jake, it ‘ll
be fun enough fer me to sit hyar an’ smoke
in the shade, an’ watch fer you to come
a-runnin’ from thet big German devil....
Pard, they say he’s a bad man!”
“Sure. I know thet. All them Germans
is bad.”
“If the boss hadn’t been
so dog-gone strict about gun-play I’d love to
go with you,” responded Bill. “But
he didn’t give me no orders. You’re
the whole outfit this round-up.”
“Bill, you’d have to take
orders from me,” said Jake, coolly.
“Sure. Thet’s why I come with Andy.”
The other cowboy, called Andy, manifested
uneasiness, and he said: “Aw, now, Jake,
you ain’t a-goin’ to ask me to go in there?...
An’ me hatin’ Germans the way I do!”
“Nope. I guess I’ll
order Bill to go in an’ fetch Neuman out,”
replied Jake, complacently, as he made as if to re-enter
the car.
Bill collapsed in his seat. “Jake,”
he expostulated, weakly, “this job was given
you because of your rep fer deploomacy....
Sure I haven’t none of thet.... An’
you, Jake, why you’re the smoothest an’
slickest talker thet ever come to the Northwest.”
Evidently Jake had a vulnerable point.
He straightened up with a little swagger. “Wal,
you watch me,” he said. “I’ll
fetch the big Dutchman eatin’ out of my hand....
An’ say, when we git him in the car an’
start back let’s scare the daylights out of
him.”
“Thet’d be powerful fine. But how?”
“You fellers take a hunch from
me,” replied Jake. And he strode off up
the lane toward the ranch-house.
Jake had been commissioned to acquaint
Neuman with the fact that recent developments demanded
his immediate presence at “Many Waters.”
The cowboy really had a liking for the job, though
he pretended not to.
Neuman had not yet begun harvesting.
There were signs to Jake’s experienced eye that
the harvest-hands were expected this very day.
Jake fancied he knew why the rancher had put off his
harvesting. And also he knew that the extra force
of harvest-hands would not appear. He was regarded
with curiosity by the women members of the Neuman household,
and rather enjoyed it. There were several comely
girls in evidence. Jake did not look a typical
Northwest foreman and laborer. Booted and spurred,
with his gun swinging visibly, and his big sombrero
and gaudy scarf, he looked exactly what he was, a
cowman of the open ranges.
His inquiries elicited the fact that
Neuman was out in the fields, waiting for the harvest-hands.
“Wal, if he’s expectin’
thet outfit of I.W.W.’s he’ll never harvest,”
said Jake, “for some of them is hanged an’
the rest run out of the country.”
Jake did not wait to see the effect
of his news. He strode back toward the fields,
and with the eye of a farmer he appraised the barns
and corrals, and the fields beyond. Neuman raised
much wheat, and enough alfalfa to feed his stock.
His place was large and valuable, but not comparable
to “Many Waters.”
Out in the wheat-fields were engines
with steam already up, with combines and threshers
and wagons waiting for the word to start. Jake
enjoyed the keen curiosity roused by his approach.
Neuman strode out from a group of waiting men.
He was huge of build, ruddy-faced and bearded, with
deep-set eyes.
“Are you Neuman?” inquired Jake.
“That’s me,” gruffly came the reply.
“I’m Anderson’s
foreman. I’ve been sent over to tell you
thet you’re wanted pretty bad at ‘Many
Waters.’”
The man stared incredulously. “What?...
Who wants me?”
“Anderson. An’ I reckon there’s
more though I ain’t informed.”
Neuman rumbled a curse. Amaze
dominated him. “Anderson!... Well,
I don’t want to see him,” he replied.
“I reckon you don’t,” was the cowboy’s
cool reply.
The rancher looked him up and down.
However familiar his type was to Anderson, it was
strange to Neuman. The cowboy breathed a potential
force. The least significant thing about his appearance
was that swinging gun. He seemed cool and easy,
with hard, keen eyes. Neuman’s face took
a shade off color.
“But I’m going to harvest
to-day,” he said. “I’m late.
I’ve a hundred hands coming.”
“Nope. You haven’t none comin’,”
asserted Jake.
“What!” ejaculated Neuman.
“Reckon it’s near ten
o’clock,” said the cowboy. “We
run over here powerful fast.”
“Yes, it’s near ten,”
bellowed Neuman, on the verge of a rage.... “I
haven’t harvest-hands coming!... What’s
this talk?”
“Wal, about nine-thirty I seen
all your damned I.W.W.’s, except what was shot
an’ hanged, loaded in a cattlecar an’ started
out of the country.”
A blow could not have hit harder than
the cowboy’s biting speech. Astonishment
and fear shook Neuman before he recovered control of
himself.
“If it’s true, what’s
that to me?” he bluffed, in hoarse accents.
“Neuman, I didn’t come
to answer questions,” said the cowboy, curtly.
“My boss jest sent me fer you, an’
if you bucked on comin’, then I was to say it
was your only chance to avoid publicity an’ bein’
run out of the country.”
Neuman was livid of face now and shaking
all over his huge frame.
“Anderson threatens me!”
he shouted. “Anderson suspicions me!...
Gott in Himmel!... Me he always cheated!
An’ now he insults ”
“Say, it ain’t healthy
to talk like thet about my boss,” interrupted
Jake, forcibly. “An’ we’re wastin’
time. If you don’t go with me we’ll
be comin’ back the whole outfit of
us!... Anderson means you’re to face his
man!”
“What man?”
“Dorn. Young Dorn, son
of old Chris Dorn of the Bend.... Dorn has some
things to tell you thet you won’t want made public....
Anderson’s givin’ you a square deal.
If it wasn’t fer thet I’d sling my
gun on you!... Do you git my hunch?”
The name of Dorn made a slack figure
of the aggressive Neuman.
“All right I go,”
he said, gruffly, and without a word to his men he
started off.
Jake followed him. Neuman made
a short cut to the gate, thus avoiding a meeting with
any of his family. At the road, however, some
men observed him and called in surprise, but he waved
them back.
“Bill, you an’ Andy collect
yourselves an’ give Mr. Neuman a seat,”
said Jake, as he opened the door to allow the farmer
to enter.
The two cowboys gave Neuman the whole
of the back seat, and they occupied the smaller side
seats. Jake took his place beside the driver.
“Burn her up!” was his order.
The speed of the car made conversation
impossible until the limits of a town necessitated
slowing down. Then the cowboys talked. For
all the attention they paid to Neuman, he might as
well not have been present. Before long the driver
turned into a road that followed a railroad track
for several miles and then crossed it to enter a good-sized
town. The streets were crowded with people and
the car had to be driven slowly. At this juncture
Jake suggested.
“Let’s go down by the bridge.”
“Sure,” agreed his allies.
Then the driver turned down a still
more peopled street that sloped a little and evidently
overlooked the railroad tracks. Presently they
came in sight of a railroad bridge, around which there
appeared to be an excited yet awestruck throng.
All faces were turned up toward the swaying form of
a man hanging by a rope tied to the high span of the
bridge.
“Wal, Glidden’s hangin’ there yet,”
remarked Jake, cheerfully.
With a violent start Neuman looked
out to see the ghastly placarded figure, and then
he sank slowly back in his seat. The cowboys apparently
took no notice of him. They seemed to have forgotten
his presence.
“Funny they’d cut all
the other I.W.W.’s down an’ leave Glidden
hangin’ there,” observed Bill.
“Them vigilantes sure did it
up brown,” added Andy. “I was dyin’
to join the band. But they didn’t ask me.”
“Nor me,” replied Jake,
regretfully. “An’ I can’t understand
why, onless it was they was afeared I couldn’t
keep a secret.”
“Who is them vigilantes, anyhow?” asked
Bill, curiously.
“Wal, I reckon nobody knows.
But I seen a thousand armed men this mornin’.
They sure looked bad. You ought to have seen them
poke the I.W.W.’s with cocked guns.”
“Was any one shot?” queried Andy.
“Not in the daytime. Nobody
killed by this Citizens’ Protective League,
as they call themselves. They just rounded up
all the suspicious men an’ herded them on to
thet cattle-train an’ carried them off.
It was at night when the vigilantes worked masked
an’ secret an’ sure bloody. Jest
like the old vigilante days! ... An’ you
can gamble they ain’t through yet.”
“Uncle Sam won’t need to send any soldiers
here.”
“Wal, I should smile not.
Thet’d be a disgrace to the Northwest. It
was a bad time fer the I.W.W. to try any tricks
on us.”
Jake shook his lean head and his jaw
bulged. He might have been haranguing, cowboy-like,
for the benefit of the man they feigned not to notice,
but it was plain, nevertheless, that he was angry.
“What gits me wuss ’n
them I.W.W.’s is the skunks thet give Uncle Sam
the double-cross,” said Andy, with dark face.
“I’ll stand fer any man an’
respect him if he’s aboveboard an’ makes
his fight in the open. But them coyotes thet
live off the land an’ pretend to be American
when they ain’t they make me pisen
mad.”
“I heerd the vigilantes has
marked men like thet,” observed Bill.
“I’ll give you a hunch,
fellers,” replied Jake, grimly. “By
Gawd! the West won’t stand fer traitors!”
All the way to “Many Waters,”
where it was possible to talk and be heard, the cowboys
continued in like strain. And not until the driver
halted the car before Anderson’s door did they
manifest any awareness of Neuman.
“Git out an’ come in,”
said Jake to the pallid, sweating rancher.
He led Neuman into the hall and knocked
upon Anderson’s study door. It was opened
by Dorn.
“Wal, hyar we are,” announced
Jake, and his very nonchalance attested to pride.
Anderson was standing beside his desk.
He started, and his hand flashed back significantly
as he sighted his rival and enemy.
“No gun-play, boss, was your
orders,” said Jake. “An’ Neuman
ain’t packin’ no gun.”
It was plain that Anderson made a
great effort at restraint. But he failed.
And perhaps the realization that he could not kill
this man liberated his passion. Then the two
big ranchers faced each other Neuman livid
and shaking, Anderson black as a thunder-cloud.
“Neuman, you hatched up a plot
with Glidden to kill me,” said Anderson, bitterly.
Neuman, in hoarse, brief answer, denied it.
“Sure! Deny it. What
do we care? ... We’ve got you, Neuman,”
burst out Anderson, his heavy voice ringing with passion.
“But it’s not your low-down plot thet’s
r’iled me. There’s been a good many
men who’ve tried to do away with me. I’ve
outplayed you in many a deal. So your personal
hate for me doesn’t count. I’m sore an’
you an’ me can’t live in the same place,
because you’re a damned traitor. You’ve
lived here for twenty years. You’ve grown
rich off the country. An’ you’d sell
us to your rotten Germany. What I think of you
for that I’m goin’ to tell you.”
Anderson paused to take a deep breath.
Then he began to curse Neuman. All the rough
years of his frontier life, as well as the quieter
ones of his ranching days, found expression in the
swift, thunderous roll of his terrible scorn.
Every vile name that had ever been used by cowboy,
outlaw, gambler, leaped to Anderson’s stinging
tongue. All the keen, hard epithets common to
the modern day he flung into Neuman’s face.
And he ended with a profanity that was as individual
in character as its delivery was intense.
“I’m callin’ you
for my own relief,” he concluded, “an’
not that I expect to get under your hide.”
Then he paused. He wiped the
beaded drops from his forehead, and he coughed and
shook himself. His big fists unclosed. Passion
gave place to dignity.
“Neuman, it’s a pity you
an’ men like you can’t see the truth.
That’s the mystery to me why any
one who had spent half a lifetime an’ prospered
here in our happy an’ beautiful country could
ever hate it. I never will understand that.
But I do understand that America will never harbor
such men for long. You have your reasons, I reckon.
An’ no doubt you think you’re justified.
That’s the tragedy. You run off from hard-ruled
Germany. You will not live there of your own choice.
You succeed here an’ live in peace an’
plenty.... An’, by God! you take up with
a lot of foreign riffraff an’ double-cross the
people you owe so much!... What’s wrong
with your mind?... Think it over.... An’
that’s the last word I have for you.”
Anderson, turning to his desk, took
up a cigar and lighted it. He was calm again.
There was really sadness where his face had shown only
fury. Then he addressed Dorn.
“Kurt, it’s up to you
now,” he said. “As my superintendent
an’ some-day partner, what you’ll say
goes with me.... I don’t know what bein’
square would mean in relation to this man.”
Anderson sat down heavily in his desk
chair and his face became obscured in cigar smoke.
“Neuman, do you recognize me?”
asked Dorn, with his flashing eyes on the rancher.
“No,” replied Neuman.
“I’m Chris Dorn’s
son. My father died a few days ago. He overtaxed
his heart fighting fire in the wheat ... Fire
set by I.W.W. men. Glidden’s men! ...
They burned our wheat. Ruined us!”
Neuman showed shock at the news, at
the sudden death of an old friend, but he did not
express himself in words.
“Do you deny implication in
Glidden’s plot to kill Anderson?” demanded
Dorn.
“Yes,” replied Neuman.
“Well, you’re a liar!”
retorted Dorn. “I saw you with Glidden and
my father. I followed you at Wheatly out
along the railroad tracks. I slipped up and heard
the plot. It was I who snatched the money from
my father.”
Neuman’s nerve was gone, but
with his stupid and stubborn process of thought he
still denied, stuttering incoherently.
“Glidden has been hanged,”
went on Dorn. “A vigilante band has been
organized here in the valley. Men of your known
sympathy will not be safe, irrespective of your plot
against Anderson. But as to that, publicity alone
will be enough to ruin you.... Americans of the
West will not tolerate traitors.... Now the question
you’ve got to decide is this. Will you
take the risks or will you sell out and leave the
country?”
“I’ll sell out,” replied Neuman.
“What price do you put on your ranch as it stands?”
“One hundred thousand dollars.”
Dorn turned to Anderson and asked, “Is it worth
that much?”
“No. Seventy-five thousand would be a big
price,” replied the rancher.
“Neuman, we will give you seventy-five
thousand for your holdings. Do you accept?”
“I have no choice,” replied Neuman, sullenly.
“Choice!” exclaimed Dorn.
“Yes, you have. And you’re not being
cheated. I’ve stated facts. You are
done in this valley. You’re ruined now!
And Glidden’s fate stares you in the face....
Will you sell and leave the country?”
“Yes,” came the deep reply, wrenched from
a stubborn breast.
“Go draw up your deeds, then notify us,”
said Dorn, with finality.
Jake opened the door. Stolidly
and slowly Neuman went out, precisely as he had entered,
like a huge man in conflict with unintelligible thoughts.
“Send him home in the car,” called Anderson.