Chapter XXVIII. What the Company Man Told the Mexicans.
While Barbara and her three friends at home were rejoicing over the
message from Jefferson Worth telling them that he had secured the
money needed to go on with the work, Willard Holmes was alone in his
room in the San Felipe hotel.
Following the engineer's interview with Mr. Cartwright, he had
passed through a stormy scene with James Greenfield and the words of
the president of The King's Basin Land and Irrigation Company were
ringing in his ears with painful monotony: "Discharged--discharged--
discharged!"
For the first time in his life the engineer had heard those words
addressed to himself. He could not rid himself of the feeling that
he had come suddenly to the end of his career.
All his life Willard Holmes had had back of him the powerful
influence of his foster uncle. Positions and opportunities had come
to him from the first without effort on his part. Notwithstanding
the fact that his ability as an engineer was naturally of a high
order and that his training was of the best, he had never been
dependent wholly upon these things. Other and stronger
considerations had always given him his place. For the first time in
his life he faced the world of his profession with nothing but his
naked ability as an engineer to speak for him, while his abrupt
dismissal from the Company compelled him to realize with sudden
force how over-shadowed his work had always been by outside
influences and how dependent he had been upon them. He felt lost and
bewildered, knowing not which way to turn. His future seemed a
blank. He had been anxious and eager to get back to his work in the
Basin. But he had not realized how much that work meant to him--how
his plans, his dreams, his whole life work had become centered in
the reclamation of The King's Basin Desert.
If his dismissal had come from anything connected with his work, he
told himself, it would be different. He thought bitterly how he had
struggled with insufficient equipment and inadequate makeshifts of
every kind to hold the Company system together that the pioneers
might have the water, without which the work of reclamation could
not be done. He knew every stake and pile and plank and crack and
patch in the whole system. He had learned the tricks of the river
and was familiar with the conditions peculiar to the desert country.
He knew the terrible danger of the flood season that was only two
months away. He had planned and prepared to meet emergencies that
would be sure to arise.
And now, because he had refused to deliver the settlers wholly into
the hands of these New York capitalists, who cared nothing at all
for the real work save as it could be made to increase their money
bags, he was turned out. There was now no reason even for his return
to The King's Basin. Why, he asked himself, should he go back? To
see some other man doing his work? To watch as an outsider the
development of the land? or perhaps--as was more likely--to stand
idly by and watch its destruction?
But even as he told himself that he could not do that, he knew that
he would go back; that, indeed, he must go. The desert called him--
summoned him imperatively;--the desert, and something else:
something that was as mysteriously impelling as the spirit of the
land; something that had grown into his life even as his work had
grown; something that seemed to him now a part of his work from the
beginning.
All that day the engineer avoided Greenfield and his eastern
friends. In the evening he dined alone and after the meal sat alone
in the hotel lobby with his back to the crowd, watching through the
big window the life of the street outside--watching without seeing.
Moodily he pulled at his cigar, his thoughts far away in Barbara's
Desert where, unknown to him, Abe Lee on the buckskin horse was
riding--riding--riding to save the work of Jefferson Worth.
His thoughts were interrupted by the voice of Jefferson Worth
himself, who, seeing the engineer alone, had gone to him. Holmes,
drawing another chair close to his, greeted Barbara's father with
eager questions. "Have you heard from home? Is everything all
right?"
The older man accepted the chair by the engineer's side and answered
his questions by saying: "Mr. Cartwright instructed his New York
bankers to wire this money to my account in Republic. I notified Abe
to pay the men to-morrow and go on with the work."
It was characteristic of Jefferson Worth that he did not attempt to
thank Holmes for his part in the transaction with Cartwright, but in
some subtle way the engineer was made to feel his gratitude and
appreciation. After a pause Worth continued: "I am going to start
back to-night on the ten-thirty. When are you figuring on going
back?"
The engineer smiled grimly. "I can't figure on anything definite
just now, Mr. Worth. I might as well tell you, I suppose, that I am
no longer connected with the Company."
The announcement did not appear to be unexpected to Jefferson Worth,
but his slim fingers caressed his chin as he said: "I was afraid of
that. Have you anything in view?"
Holmes felt that not only had Worth foreseen the situation, but that
he had already set in motion some movement to relieve it. "No, sir.
It came so suddenly that I have scarcely had time to think."
"I figured some time ago that the Company would not be able to hold
you much longer," was the surprising comment. "The S. & C. has been
looking for a good man to put down in our country for some time.
Your experience on the river would make you particularly valuable to
them under existing conditions. I told them about you. They have
been holding off waiting developments. If I were you I would get in
touch with them at once. You can go up to the city with me to-night.
We will stop over and look into the proposition and then if it is
all right and agreeable to you we can go on home together."
Jefferson Worth seemed to understand perfectly the engineer's desire
to return to The King's Basin.
Before Holmes could express his delight and gratitude at the
unexpected relief, a call-boy, passing among the guests, shouted:
"Mr. Jefferson Worth! Mr. Jefferson Worth!"
The banker opened the message, read it, then--without a word-handed
the yellow slip to his companion. The engineer read: "Banks in Basin
won't accept New York business. Can't handle pay checks. Abe Lee
starting for San Felipe overland to-night. Have money and fresh
horse ready. Barbara."
Holmes looked in consternation from the paper in his hand to
Barbara's father. The face of Jefferson Worth expressed nothing. It
was perfectly calm and emotionless, only the slim fingers were
lifted to the chin as if behind that gray mask the mind of the man
was groping, seizing, searching, examining every phase of the
situation so suddenly confronting him. In answer to the engineer's
questioning look he spoke in colorless words, with machine-like
exactness, as if the matter under consideration were a mere
mathematical problem presented for his solution. "The Company owns
the banks. Greenfield went into the telegraph office this morning as
Cartwright and I came out. Abe would get my message by nine o'clock.
The banks would get Greenfield's instructions the same time. Abe
would at once promise the men their money to-morrow. That cashier
didn't tell him they wouldn't handle the business until too late for
him to get me before the banks closed here. Greenfield is playing
for time so that the strikers will make trouble. Abe has it figured
out right. He can get here and back before I could get the money to
him by train. He should reach here to-morrow night. There is nothing
to do except to see Cartwright this evening so that he can wire New
York to-night and I can get the cash through the bank here before
Abe gets in to-morrow."
As he grasped the situation and the methods Greenfield had employed
to injure Worth's interests, the engineer's eyes flashed. "Mr.
Worth," he cried, "that is the dirtiest trick I ever saw turned."
"It's business, Mr. Holmes. Mr. Greenfield is merely using his
advantage, that's all."
The methods of The King's Basin Land and Irrigation Company in La
Palma de la Mano de Dios were the methods of capital, impersonal,
inhuman--the methods of a force governed by laws as fixed as the
laws of nature, neither cruel nor kind; inconsiderate of man's
misery or happiness, his life or death; using man for its own ends--
profit, as men use water and soil and sun and air. The methods of
Jefferson Worth were the methods of a man laboring with his brother
men, sharing their hardships, sharing their returns; a man using
money as a workman uses his tools to fashion and build and develop,
adding thus to the welfare of human kind. It was inevitable that the
Company and Jefferson Worth should war.
James Greenfield served Capital; Jefferson Worth sought to make
Capital serve the race. But in the career of each of these men, who
had been driven by the master passion--Good Business, into The
Hollow of God's Hand, the dominant influence was a life. In the
career of Jefferson Worth it was Barbara. In the career of James
Greenfield it was Willard Holmes.
In The King's Basin reclamation work, the New York financier, whose
relation to Willard Holmes was a tribute to his love for the
engineer's mother, felt that in some way--for some cause which he
could not understand--the younger man was growing away from him.
Their relation of employer and employe seemed to mar the close
intimacy of the old ties, and the older man looked forward eagerly
to the time when his business plans should be carried to a
successful climax and they would both leave the West for their
eastern home. That morning in the hotel, when he saw Holmes go with
Cartwright to Jefferson Worth and by that knew that the engineer had
used his influence against the interests of the Company, he was
astonished and hurt. He felt that the boy whom he had reared as his
own had turned against him. As the president of the Company he
abruptly discharged the engineer, for he could do nothing else. As
the foster-father of Willard Holmes, he was still proud of the
younger man's strength of character, for under all his anger at
being thwarted in his plan against Worth he knew in his heart that
the engineer had done right.
As the day passed and the engineer did not seek his company, while
Greenfield's own stubborn pride forbade him to go to Holmes, the
older man's heart grew more and more lonely. That evening, when he
saw Jefferson Worth and Holmes together in earnest conversation and
through all of the following day saw them apparently associated
intimately in some plan or enterprise, for the first time personal
feeling entered into his consideration of the whole situation. He
felt that his business rival had become his rival for the affections
of the boy he loved. The business victories of Jefferson Worth he
could accept without feeling; but that this man--a stranger--should
come between him and his foster-son, the child of the woman he had
loved with lifelong fidelity, stirred him to a vicious, personal
hatred.
At dusk that evening he saw Holmes and Worth dining together. When
the meal was over he sat in the lobby, ostensibly chatting with
friends, but covertly watching the two who seemed to be awaiting
someone. Suddenly he saw them rise quickly and start toward the main
entrance. A dusty, khaki-clad man of the desert was entering the
hotel. Tall, lean, bronzed, his face haggard and strained with
anxiety, his eyes blood-shot through loss of sleep, his figure
expressing in every line and movement deadly weariness and aching
muscles, he strode forward into the hotel lobby, his spurs clinking
on the white tile floor.
Greenfield recognized Abe Lee and grasped the situation instantly.
The president of The King's Basin Land and Irrigation Company knew
why the surveyor had come to San Felipe and he knew what he would
carry back. If the money to pay the strikers reached its
destination, Jefferson Worth would win; if not--
At half past nine o'clock that evening the thoughtful Manager of The
King's Basin Land and Irrigation Company received a cipher message
from his superior that drew a long, low whistle from his lips. For
almost an hour he considered with an occasional quiet curse. Then,
because he was a good Company man, he put on his hat and strolled
leisurely down the street of Kingston, apparently enjoying his
evening cigar. Once he stopped to greet a belated rancher. Again he
paused to chat a moment with a citizen. Once more he halted to
exchange a word with a group of Company men, and later stopped to
greet three Mexicans who were in from the Company's camps.
Yes, Mr. Worth's superintendent was starting from San Felipe that
very evening with money--thousands of dollars, American gold--to pay
the men. He was coming alone through the mountains on horseback.
Without doubt the men would receive their pay. The Manager was glad!