Scarcely had the train with Jefferson Worth aboard passed beyond the
yard limits of Republic when the Manager of The King's Basin Land
and Irrigation Company in Kingston was called to the telephone by
the cashier of the bank in the Company's rival town. Ten minutes
later a Western Union message in cipher went from Mr. Burk to James
Greenfield in the city.
The afternoon of the following day Willard Holmes, at the Dry River
Heading, was called to the telephone. Mr. Burk was at the other end
of the line. "There is a telegram here from your Uncle Jim ordering
you to go to the city on the first train. If you can make it, catch
the four-twenty at Frontera. I'll pack your grip and give it to you
when you go through."
Mr. Greenfield met the engineer at the depot in the city the next
morning and escorted him to his rooms in a hotel. "I was almighty
glad to get Burk's wire that you were on the road," said the older
man. "I was afraid that he would not be able to find you in time;
you go gadding about the country so. Where did he catch you?"
"Dry River Heading. My gadding takes me mostly there or to the
intake heading these days. Just now I am trying to patch up the
spillway which threatens to go out at any time altogether, and the
heading itself is so shaky I'm almost afraid to touch it for fear it
will fall down on top of me. No one ever dreamed that these
structures would ever be called upon to stand the strain they are
under now. I wish--"
"All right; all right, my boy; I think I've heard you say something
like that before. I called you in to help me on a little deal that
will put us in shape to build all the new structures you want."
"You mean that the Company is at last going to make the
appropriation I have been begging for?"
"Not exactly. They will if we can handle one individual."
"Well, in a definite way then: he is here in the city trying to
raise fifty thousand dollars. He must have it before the first of
the month or go to smash. If he goes to smash the Company will be
able to get hold of his interests, which will give us control of the
whole King's Basin project as we planned in the beginning. Then we
would be able to put what you want into the system. If Worth gets
the fifty thousand he is safe to make a million or two that would
otherwise go to the Company and we wouldn't feel justified in
spending any more money on new structures."
"But Uncle Jim, what on earth have I to do with all this?"
"It happens that you have a whole lot to do with it my boy, or I
wouldn't have called you away from your beloved headings. You
remember old George Cartwright, don't you?"
Willard Holmes had grown to manhood with Cartwright's sons and his
earliest memories were of boyish good times at the old gentleman's
home. With James Greenfield, Mr. Cartwright had been one of his
father's oldest and warmest friends. The engineer listened with
amazed interest as Greenfield told him that his old friend was
spending the winter on the coast, and that some one, the general
manager of the S. & C., probably, had introduced Jefferson Worth to
him.
"And," Greenfield finished, "they have him all lined up to furnish
Worth with the capital he needs to go ahead. If he gets that money
we will never be able to block him."
"But why don't you get Cartwright into your crowd, if he is so ready
to invest in reclamation projects?" asked the engineer.
"I can't on account of White and some of the others. You know how
cranky the old man is. Besides, we don't want him in the Company.
What we want is to block Jefferson Worth from getting hold of that
money. I sent for you because you can do more with Cartwright on
this proposition than any man living."
"You mean that you have sent for me to influence Mr. Cartwright
against Jefferson Worth's interests?"
"I mean that I expect you to use your influence in the interests of
the Company--in my interests. Surely, Willard, that is not asking
anything unreasonable."
"But Uncle Jim, you just said that if Worth gets this help he will
clean up a million or two. That looks like it would be safe enough
for Mr. Cartwright."
"Yes, and I said also that if Worth did not get that money the
Company would acquire his interests in The King's Basin."
While the Company president was speaking a messenger boy knocked at
the door. Greenfield read the note and handed it to Holmes, who in
turn read: "Mr. Cartwright left this afternoon for San Felipe. Will
probably return in a week. Worth is still in town."
"That means you must take a little vacation, Willard."
"But I can't, Uncle Jim," protested the engineer. "My work is in
such shape that I--"
The older man interrupted. "Your work! You seem to think that there
is nothing of importance to The King's Basin Land and Irrigation
Company but drops and headings and intakes and canals, and the Lord
knows what else, you mess around with! If you handle old Cartwright
in the interests of the Company it will be the best week's work you
ever did. He is likely to return any day, and you've got to stay
right here and see this matter through."
All that day the engineer roamed about the city, striving to find
distraction in the amusements offered but feeling strangely alone
and out of place. Under other circumstances he would have keenly
enjoyed the brief vacation and the change from the desert life and
work, but now he could think of nothing but the situation in which
he so unexpectedly found himself.
Once he would not have hesitated an instant to do Greenfield's
bidding. Why should he hesitate now?
Why, indeed; save for this--Willard Holmes knew that it would be
better for the people in the new country if Jefferson Worth
continued his operations.
Willard Holmes's conception and understanding of his work as an
engineer had changed materially in the years since those first days
with Barbara in Rubio City, even as, under his hand, the desert
itself had changed. It may have been that in his long, lonely rides
across the great plain in the white light of the wide, cloudless
sky, something of the spirit of the slow, silent ages that had
wrought in the making of the desert had touched his spirit as it
could not have been influenced by the smoke-clouded atmosphere and
crowded highways of the East; or that in the lonely nights under the
stars the weird, mysterious voices of the desert had taught him
truths he had never heard in the noisy cries of the great cities.
Perhaps, as he had looked day after day across the wide far-reaching
miles with their seas and scarfs and veils of color to the purple
mountains, the very greatness of the unpeopled lands forced him to a
larger thinking and planning and dreaming than would have been
possible in the limited views of his eastern homeland; or that the
spirit of the hardy settlers awoke the blood of his own pioneer
ancestors to a feeling of fellowship; or his constant struggle with
the river aroused the old conquering spirit of his race. Or again it
might be that some powerful chord, deep-hidden and silent in his
nature, had been touched by the spirit of the girl who had bidden
him learn the language of her country and who had said that she
could never forgive one who was untrue to the work itself.
On the other hand there was the training of his whole professional
career. Up to the beginning of The King's Basin work the engineer
had known no other creed than the creed of those corporation
servants who have no higher interest than that of the machine they
serve. There was also his intimate relation with Mr. Greenfield and
the debt of gratitude he owed the man who had, in every way, been a
father to him. And there was the prejudice of class, the instinct
that holds a man to his own peculiar people, and the argument
cleverly advanced by Greenfield that the protection of The King's
Basin project would be secured.
As the engineer was wandering, in the aimless and preoccupied manner
of one whose mind is not on his task, through one of the city parks,
he saw just ahead a man whose figure seemed familiar. With aroused
interest he quickened his pace. There was no mistaking that form, so
strongly upright, so instinct with vigorous power; nor those broad
shoulders and the finely poised head. It was the Seer.
Overtaking the older engineer, Holmes greeted him eagerly and the
brown eyes of the old Chief shone with pleasure while he returned
the young man's greeting heartily.
None at all. He had just arrived from the North Country and was
loafing a day or two. And Holmes?
The younger man laughed. He was a stranger in a strange land, forced
by circumstances to do nothing.
Good. They would find a quiet corner somewhere and Holmes could tell
his old Chief about The King's Basin work. Also The King's Basin man
could tell the Seer about Barbara.
So they found a seat and Willard Holmes told how splendidly the
Seer's dream was coming true, and in answer to many questions talked
of Barbara and her life in the new country, of Jefferson Worth and
his operations, and of some of his own professional difficulties and
problems. And the Seer, as he led the younger man on and studied the
strong bronzed face that was all aglow with enthusiasm over the
work, smiled quietly as he remembered the tenderfoot who had once
threatened to report his Chief to the Company.
Brave, great-hearted, generous Seer! There was in all his
questioning not a hint of any feeling against the younger man who
had been given the place that should have been his. He fell to
wondering if after all the Company had now in Holmes the man they
thought they had, or the man they did have, indeed, when they made
him their chief engineer. If the test were to come now--The Seer did
not know that Willard Holmes was even then undergoing that test.
The two men dined together that evening and afterwards over the
cigars in the Seer's room the old engineer talked of the progress
and future of the great Reclamation work, of its value not only to
our own nation but to the over-crowded nations beyond the seas, and
of its place in the great forward march of the race. Then gravely he
spoke to the younger man of his own efforts to bring the work to the
attention of the people, of disappointments and failures, year after
year, until at last the work in Barbara's Desert had been launched,
and following that several other projects until now at last
reclamation had become a great national enterprise. And Willard
Holmes knew that out of the millions that would be realized from
these reclaimed lands this man, who had seen the vision, would
receive nothing. The Seer had not even a position with an irrigation
company or with a reclamation project.
As he listened to the man who had literally given the best of his
life to a great work, the Company engineer felt as he sometimes felt
when alone in the heart of the desert itself he heard its call, the
call that was at once a challenge, a threat and a promise; or as
when he had felt the sweet power of Barbara's presence.
At his hotel Holmes found the president of The King's Basin Land and
Irrigation Company anxiously awaiting him: "Look here!" was
Greenfield's greeting. "This thing is approaching a climax."
He handed the engineer a telegram from Burk. Willard Holmes glanced
at the yellow slip of paper.