In obedience to its master passion--Good Business--the race now
began pouring its life into the barren wastes of The King's Basin
Desert.
In the city by the sea at the end of the Southwestern and
Continental there was a suite of offices with real gold letters on
the ground-glass doors richly spelling "The King's Basin Land and
Irrigation Company." Behind these doors there was real mahogany
furniture, solid, substantial and rich; a high safe; many attractive
maps; and a gentleman who--never having traveled west of Buffalo
before--could answer with authority every conceivable question
relating to the reclamation of the arid lands of the great West.
When there were no more questions to ask he could still tell you
many things of the wonderland of wealth that was being opened to the
public by the Company, demonstrating thus beyond the possibility of
a doubt how many times a dollar could be multiplied.
From this office went forth to the advertising departments of the
magazines and papers, skillfully prepared copy, which in turn was
followed by pamphlets, circulars and letters innumerable. In one
room a company of clerks and book-keepers and accountants pored over
their tasks at desks and counters. In another a squad of
stenographers filled the air with the sound of their type-writers.
Through the doors of the different rooms passed an endless
procession; men from the front with the marks of the desert sun on
their faces--engineers, superintendents, bosses, messengers, agents
--servants of the Company; laborers of every sort and nationality
came in answer to the cry: "Men wanted!"; special salesmen from
foundry, factory and shop drawn by prospective large sales of
machinery, implements and supplies; land-hungry men from everywhere
seeking information and opportunity for investment.
At Deep Well (which is no well at all) on the rim of the Basin,
trainloads of supplies, implements, machinery, lumber and
construction material, horses, mules and men were daily side-tracked
and unloaded on the desert sands. Overland travelers gazed in
startled wonder at the scene of stirring activity that burst so
suddenly upon them in the midst of the barren land through which
they had ridden for hours without sight of a human habitation or
sign of man. The great mountain of goods, piled on the dun plain;
the bands of horses and mules; the camp-fires; the blankets spread
on the bare ground; the men moving here and there in seemingly
hopeless confusion; all looked so ridiculously out of place and so
pitifully helpless.
Every hour companies of men with teams and vehicles set out from the
camp to be swallowed up in the silent distance. Night and day the
huge mountain of goods was attacked by the freighters who, with
their big wagons drawn by six, eight, twelve, or more, mules,
appeared mysteriously out of the weird landscape as if they were
spirits materialized by some mighty unknown genii of the desert.
Their heavy wagons loaded, their water barrels filled, they turned
again to the unseen realm from which they had been summoned. The
sound of the loud voices of the drivers, the creaking of the wagons,
the jingle of harness, the shot-like reports of long whips died
quickly away; while, to the vision, the outfits passed slowly--
fading, dissolving in their great clouds of dust, into the land of
mystery.
In Rubio City Jefferson Worth continued on his machine-like way at
the Pioneer Bank, apparently paying no heed to the movement that
offered such opportunities for profitable investment. Barbara rarely
spoke now of the work that had been so dear to her, nor did she ever
ride to the foot of the hill on the Mesa to look over the Desert.
The Seer was in the northern railroad work again, but Abe Lee, with
Tex and Pat and Pablo Garcia, had gone with the beginning of the
stream of life that was pouring into the new country.
True to the far-reaching plans of the Company, at the largest and
most central of the supply camps, located in the very heart of The
King's Basin, the townsite of Kingston was laid out, and even in the
days when every drop of water was hauled from three to ten miles
town lots were offered for sale and sold to eager speculators.
A year from the beginning of the work at the intake at the river,
water was turned into the canals. With the coming of the water,
Kingston changed, almost between suns, from a rude supply camp to an
established town with post-office, stores, hotel, blacksmith shop,
livery stables, all in buildings more or less substantial. Most
substantial of all was the building owned and occupied by the
offices of the Company.
With the coming of the water also, the stream of human life that
flowed into the Basin was swollen by hundreds of settlers driven by
the master passion--Good Business--to toil and traffic, to build the
city, to subdue and cultivate the land and thus to realize the
Seer's dream, while the engineer himself was banished from the work
to which he had given his life. Every sunrise saw new tent-houses
springing up on the claims of the settlers around the Company town
and new buildings beginning in the center of it all--Kingston. Every
sunset saw miles of new ditches ready to receive the water from the
canal and acres of new land cleared and graded for irrigation.
Thus it was that afternoon when, from his office window, Mr. Burk,
the General Manager of The King's Basin Land and Irrigation Company,
watched a freighter with a twelve-mule load of goods stop his team
directly across the street in front of the largest and most
important general store in the Basin.
Deck Jordan, the merchant, came out and the Manager easily heard the
driver's loud voice: "Jim'll be along in 'bout another hour, I
reckon. We aim to get the rest in two more trips."
"Six twelve-mule loads in that shipment," thought the Company's
manager; "and that fellow set up business with a two-horse load of
stuff!"
An empty wagon was driven up to the store and the General Manager
recognized in the driver one of the Company's men from a grading
camp six miles away; while another wagon--a Company wagon also--
nearly filled with supplies moved away toward the open desert.
Deck's business was assuming quite respectable proportions thought
Mr. Burk. And Deck's business was mostly with employes of the
Company. Taking a cigar from a box on his desk, Mr. Burk scratched a
match on the heel of his shoe and, leaning back in his office chair,
continued thinking. The Manager of The King's Basin Land and
Irrigation Company was paid to think. The Company hired Mr. Burk's
peculiar talent even as they hired the physical strength of their
laborers or the professional skill of their engineers.
As he meditated, the Manager still watched from the window the
activities of the street. Soon from the open desert, beyond the last
new building down the street, he saw a horseman approaching. At an
easy swinging lope the rider came straight toward the Company's
headquarters and, as he drew near, the Manager recognized the chief
engineer. Greeting the man at the open window as he passed, Willard
Holmes dismounted at the entrance of the building and, going first
to the water tank, soon appeared in the doorway of the Manager's
room. The engineer's clothes from boots to Stetson were covered with
dust and his face was deeply bronzed by the months in the open air.
Turning from the window Mr. Burk held out the box of cigars.
"No thanks," said the Chief with a smile. "I'm hot as a lime kiln
now. Wait until after supper."
Throwing his hat and gloves on the floor, he dropped into a chair
with a sigh of relief at the grateful coolness of the room after
hours of riding in the dazzling light of the desert sun.
The other, returning the box to its place, tipped back in his chair
and elevated his well-dressed feet to his desk and, with his cigar
in one corner of his mouth and his head cocked suggestively to one
side, looked his companion over with a critical smile. "I say,
Holmes, how would you like to be in little old New York this
evening?"
At the question and the manner of the speaker the engineer held up
his hands with a motion of protest as he commanded, in tragic voice:
"Get thee behind me, Satan!" Then, at the Manager's laugh, he added
seriously: "New York is all right, Burk, but I guess I can manage to
stick it out here a while longer."
Burk looked at the engineer with the same thoughtful expression that
had marked his face when he watched the wagon-load of supplies
before the store across the street. "I have noticed that you show
symptoms of slowly developing an interest in your job," he murmured.
"You were at the river yesterday."
"No; I was at Number Five Heading. Abe Lee will be in from the
intake this afternoon. I was there day before yesterday."
"How is the little old Colorado behaving herself?"
"All right so far. Our work is all a guess though. There is not a
scrap of data to go on, you know." There was a hint of anxiety in
the chief engineer's answer.
"I suppose you find the talkative Abe cheerfully optimistic about
the future of our structures as usual?"
Holmes did not smile at the jesting tone of the Manager. "Lee is
certainly doing all he can to make things safe. He is a fiend for
thoroughness, and between you and me, Burk, the Company ought to
spend more money on that intake at least. A few more thousands would
make it what it should be."
The man who was paid to think held out a hand protestingly. "My dear
boy, how many times have we gone over that? The Company will spend
just what they must spend to get this scheme going and not a cent
more. Later, when the business justifies, they will improve the
system. Don't get yourself sidetracked by the notion that this whole
project is for the benefit of the dear people and that the Company
is made up of benevolent old gentlemen, who have nothing to do with
their wealth but promote philanthropic enterprises. You should know
your Uncle Jim better. Dividends, my boy, dividends; that's what
we're all here for, and you can't afford to forget it. By the way,
did you have any dinner to-day?"
"Hum-m. Sour bread, sow-belly, frijoles? Or was it canned corn? I
say, old man, do you remember some of the places where we used to
dine at home--flowers and music, and table linen, and real dishes,
and waiters with real food, and women--God bless 'em!--real women?
What would you give to-night, Holmes, for something to eat that had
never been preserved, embalmed, cured, dried or tinned? It's not a
dream of fairyland, my boy; there are such places in the world and
there are such things to eat. Come, what do you say? Where shall we
dine tonight and what will you have?"
"You fiend!" growled Holmes. "You know I'd sell my soul this minute
for one good red apple."
Lowering his feet to the floor and rising, the Manager of The King's
Basin Land and Irrigation Company crossed the room stealthily and
carefully closed the door. Then taking a bunch of keys from his
pocket, with an air of great secrecy he unlocked a drawer in his
desk, pulled it open and took out--an apple.
The Company's chief engineer fell on the Manager with an exclamation
of amazement and delight.
"Really," said Burk as he watched the fruit disappear, "your child-
like pleasure almost justifies my crime. I even feel repaid for my
self-denial. There were only three in the basket."
"How did you do it?" asked Holmes between bites, gazing at the apple
in his hand as though to devour the treat with his eyes also,
thereby doubling the pleasure.
"It was one of our dearly beloved prospective settlers," the
thoughtful Manager explained with an air of conscious merit. "He
came in from somewhere yesterday to spy out the land and, being a
prudent and thrifty farmer, he possesses, or is possessed by, a
prudent and thrifty wife. Said wife fitted out said farmer for his
journey into this far country with a market basket of provisions.
Home-made provisions, Willard, my son; home made! A whole basket
full! He had one feed left and was finishing it out there on the
sidewalk when I returned from what we of this benighted land call
dinner. How could I help looking. I watched him devour the leg of a
chicken. I watched him eat real bread with jelly on it. Then I
caught sight of three apples--three! Holmes, such wealth is
criminal. I considered--I became an anarchist. He was a big husky
and I dared not assault him, so I talked--Lord forgive me!--how I
talked. I offered confidential advice, I conjured up visions of
wealth untold. I laid him under a spell and gently led him and his
basket into the office even as he finished the pie. I showed him
maps; I gave him a cigar; I urged him to leave his basket and
satchel here in my private office for safe-keeping while he looked
around. Gladly he accepted my invitation. His confidence was
pathetic. How could the poor, trusting farmer know that I was ready,
if necessary, to murder him for his fortune? When he had gone I
locked the door and I--I--I only took two, Holmes; I dared not take
them all, for he was big and rough, as I say. But I could not
believe that a man with such wealth could miss a part of it."
"But you said you ate two," said the engineer severely, taking
another long, lingering bite.
"I did," returned the Manager, with awful solemnity. "When that
trusting but husky farmer returned later for his possessions he
thanked me many times for my kindness while I trembled with the
consciousness of my guilt, assuring him that it was no trouble at
all--no trouble at all. And then--just as I felt sure that he was
going and was beginning to breathe easier--he stopped and fumbled
around in his basket. My heart stood still. 'Hannah put some fine
apples in my dinner,' he muttered. 'I thought maybe you might like
some. Reckon I must a-et 'em after all. I thought there was--no, by
jocks! here she is.' Holmes, as I live he handed me that other
apple. It was positively uncanny. I was speechless. Not until he was
gone did I realize that it was prophetic. In like manner shall the
settlers, the farmers, save this land and us from destruction."
"It's Good Business," returned Holmes. "It exactly illustrates your
methods of dealing with the confiding public."
"Humph!" grunted the other. "I observe that you do not hesitate to
enjoy the fruits of my financiering."
A knock at the door prevented the engineer's reply.
The door opened and Abe Lee stood on the threshold. The two men
greeted the surveyor cordially but with that subtle touch in their
voices that hinted at consciousness of superior position and
authority.
Abe addressed himself directly to his Chief, saying: "We finished at
the intake last night, sir, and moved to Dry River Heading this
morning as you directed."
"You left everything at the river in good shape, of course?"
The surveyor did not answer. The tobacco and paper that, in his long
fingers, were assuming the form of a cigarette seemed to demand his
undivided attention. Burk was thoughtfully watching the two men. At
the critical moment he handed Abe a match. From the cloud of smoke
Abe spoke again. "The outfit will be ready to begin work at the
Heading to-morrow morning."
Before Holmes could speak the Manager said: "You evidently still
think, Lee, that the work at the river is not satisfactory. Are you
still predicting that our intake will go out with the next high
water?"
"I don't know whether the next high water will do it or not. The Rio
Colorado alone won't hurt us, but when the Gila and the Little
Colorado go on the war-path and come down on top of a high Colorado
flood you'll catch hell. It may be this season; it may be next. It
depends on the snowfall in the upper countries and the weather in
the spring, but it has come and it will come again."
"How do you know? There have been no records kept and no surveys. We
have no data."
"There's data enough. The Colorado leaves her own record. I know the
country; I know what the river has done and I know what the Indians
have told me."
At the surveyor's words his Chief stirred impatiently and the
Manager answered: "But we can't spend twenty or thirty thousand
dollars on a mere guess at what may happen, Lee. When the country
is fairly well settled and business justifies, we will put in a new
intake. In the meantime those structures will have to do. The K. B.
L. and I. is not in business for glory, you know." Abe spoke softly
from a cloud of smoke. "And are you explaining this situation to the
people who are coming here by the hundreds to settle? Do they
understand the chances they are taking when they buy water rights
and go ahead to develop their ranches?"
"Certainly not. If we talked risks no one would come in. The Company
must protect its interests."
The Manager stiffened. "I don't recognize your right to criticise
the Company's policy, Lee. Mr. Holmes is our chief engineer and he
assures me that our structures are as good as they can be made with
the money at our disposal. We can only carry out the policies of the
Company and we are responsible to them for the money we spend. You
have no responsibility in the matter whatever."
"Oh, hell, Burk," drawled Abe, though his eyes contradicted flatly
his soft tone. "There's no occasion for you to climb so high up that
ladder. You've been a corporation mouthpiece so long you have no
more soul than the Company." He turned to his Chief. "I left Andy in
charge at camp. He understands that I will not be back. I dropped my
resignation in your box in the office as I came in. Adios."
Leaving the office, Abe walked slowly down the street through the
heart of the Company's little town. On every hand he saw the work
that was being wrought in the Desert. There were business blocks and
houses in every stage of building from the new-laid foundation to
the moving-in of the tenants. The air rang with sound of hammer and
saw. Teams and wagons from the ranches lined the street. The very
faces of the people he met glowed with enthusiasm, while
determination and purpose were expressed in their very movements as
they hurried by.
A mile west of town the surveyor stopped on the bridge that spanned
the main canal. He paused to look around. He saw the country already
dotted with the white tent-houses of the settlers, and even as he
looked three new wagons, loaded with supplies and implements,
passed, bound for the claims of the owners. Under his feet the water
from the distant river ran strongly. To the west was a grading camp
on the line of a Company ditch; to the south was another. Far to the
north and east, along the rim of the Basin, he knew the railroad was
bringing other pioneers by the hundreds. He drew a deep breath and,
taking off his sombrero, drank in the scene. How he loved it all! It
was the Seer's dream, but the Seer could have no part in it. It was
Barbara's Desert, but Barbara was shut out--exiled. It was his work,
but he was powerless to do it. The Seer had told him to stay for his
work's sake. He smiled grimly, remembering the Manager's words.
Barbara had told him to stay, but the girl knew nothing of
conditions--how could she know? Jefferson Worth had told him to
stay. Why? Barbara, in her letters, never spoke of the work. The
Seer seldom wrote; Jefferson Worth, never. Every month the situation
had grown more unbearable. Burk might insist that he had no
responsibility and Holmes might argue that they could only do their
best with what funds the Company would supply. Abe was not of their
school. Well, he was out of it now for good. He was not the kind of
a man the Company wanted.
Returning to town he had supper at the little shack restaurant and,
going to the tent house owned by himself and two brother-surveyors
that they might have a place to sleep when in town, he gathered his
few possessions together in readiness for departure in the morning.
When the brief task was finished and he had written a note to his
two friends, who were away, he went out again on the main street,
because there was nothing else to do. It was evening now and the
usual crowd was gathered in front of the post-office to watch the
arrival of the stage, the one event of never-failing interest to
these hardy pioneers. In the throng there were teamsters, laborers,
ranchers, mechanics, real-estate agents, speculators, surveyors--
gathered from camp and field and town. Some were expecting letters
from the home folks in the world outside; a few were looking for
friends among the passengers. Many were there, as was Abe, because
it was the point of interest. All were roughly clad, marked by the
semi-tropical desert wind and sun.
It was among such men as these that Abe Lee's life had been spent.
Such scenes as these were home scenes to him. In a peculiar way,
through the Seer and Barbara, the work that these men were doing was
dear to him. He felt that he was being cast out of his own place. As
he passed through the throng Abe heard always the same topic of
conversation: the work--the work--the work. News to these men meant
more miles of canal finished, new ditches dug, more land leveled and
graded, new settlers located. The surveyor thought of the future of
these people, given wholly into the hands of the Company; of the men
in the East, who knew nothing of their hardships but who would force
them to pay royal tribute out of the fruits of their toil; of how,
even then, they were increasing the value of the Company property.
"Here she comes!" cried someone, and all eyes were turned to see the
stage swinging down the street. Abe drew back a little--to the thin
edge of the crowd; he was expecting neither letters nor friends. The
six broncos were brought to a stand in the midst of the crowd, the
mail bag was tossed to the post-master and the passengers began
climbing down from their seats.
As the last man rose from his place he stood for a moment in a
stooped position, gripping with each hand one of the standards that
supported the canvas top of the vehicle. Looking out thus over the
crowd he seemed to be gathering data for an estimate of the
population before he felt cautiously with his foot for the step.