Three days after the Seer's letters to Abe and Barbara telling them
that James Greenfield and his associates would finance an expedition
to make the preliminary surveys in The King's Basin Desert, the
west-bound overland dropped a passenger in Rubio City from New York.
The stranger was really a fine looking young man with the appearance
of being exceptionally well-bred and well-kept. Indeed the most
casual of observers would not have hesitated to pronounce him a
thoroughbred and a good individual of the best type that the race
has produced.
A company of men and women--traveling acquaintances evidently--
followed him from the Pullman to bid him good-by and to look at the
Indians, who with their wealth of curios spread before them,
squatted in a long row beside the track--objects of never failing
interest to travelers from the East.
"Ugh!" said a tall blonde, who displayed more bracelets, bangles,
chains and charms--both natural and manufactured--than any blanketed
squaw in the party of natives, "I suppose if we ever see you again
you'll be the color of that thing there." She pointed to a smoky,
copper-colored Papago in a green head-cloth and decorated shirt, who
posed in a watchful attitude near his thrifty help-meet.
"How perfectly romantic!" gushed a billowy divorcee, clinging to the
young fellow's athletic arm with little shivers of delight. "To
think of you in this great, savage, wild land, among these strange
people. Aren't you just a little bit frightened?"
"By George, I half wish I was going to stop with you. You'll get
some great shooting, don't you know!" exclaimed one of the men,
while the chorus joined in: "You'll die of loneliness!" "You'll find
nothing fit to eat!" "And do take care of yourself!"
Then as the warning, "All aboard!" and the clang of the engine bell
came down the platform, there were quick good-bys and a rush for the
car. The colored porters tossed their steps aboard and followed.
Smoothly the long, dust-covered coaches slid past. There was a
waving of handkerchiefs and caps from the rear of the observation
car, and the young man turned to look curiously about.
The stranger glanced doubtfully at the tough-looking citizen who
reached for his suit case, and without replying stepped into the
questionable looking hack standing nearby. The driver threw the
suitcase into the vehicle after his passenger and climbing to his
seat, yelled to the team.
There was no rush of brass-buttoned bell-boys to meet the guest at
the door of the hotel, and the room was well-filled with a group
strange to the eyes of the young man from New York. Bronzed-faced
men in flannel shirts and belted trousers talked to men well-dressed
in more conventional business clothes; others in their shirt sleeves
sat smoking with companions in blue overalls; two or three wore guns
loosely belted at their hips. Here and there was the pale-faced,
white-collared, tied and tailored tourist. In the corner near the
big window a group of women, some in white duck, some in khaki or
corduroy, sat chatting and enjoying the scene. No one paid the least
attention to the newcomer. The tough-looking driver of the hack
dropped the suit case near the desk with a bang and turned to reply
to a good-natured remark addressed to him by a jovial, well-dressed
man standing near. Only the clerk regarded the stranger.
The clerk smiled. "Certainly, sir." Then to a young fellow talking
over the cigar counter to a man in high-heeled boots and spurs:
"Jack, show this gentleman to forty-five."
In the well-furnished room the guide threw open long French windows
and pointed to a cot on the screened-porch outside. "Better sleep on
the porch," he volunteered.
The stranger stood staring at the door, which the breezy young man,
as he disappeared with a cheery whistle, had shut behind him with a
vigorous bang.
In the dining room the man from New York found the same easy freedom
in the manner of dress, the same lack of conventionalities and the
same atmosphere of general good-fellowship; yet he could not say
that there was any lack of real courtesy and certainly there was no
rude and boisterous talk. It was, to say the least, unsettling to
the exceptionally well-bred and well-kept stranger, accustomed to
the hotels and restaurants in the East frequented by his class.
Early that evening the Easterner sallied forth, clearly bent on
sight-seeing. He had dressed for the occasion. The gray traveling
suit had been put aside for a tailor-made outfit of corduroy. The
coat--worn without a vest over a fine negligee shirt of silk--was
Norfolk; the trousers were riding trousers and above the tan shoes
were pig-skin puttees. All this, with the light, soft hat, neat tie
and the undeniably fine figure and handsome face, would have made
him attractive on any stage. The tourists turned to look after him
with expressions of admiring envy; the natives--white, red, black,
yellow and brown--accepted him with no more than a passing glance as
a part of the strange new life that the railroad was constantly
bringing to Rubio City.
Calmly conscious of himself and openly interested, in a mildly
condescending way, the young man strolled down one side of the main
street to the end of the business section, then back on the other.
Twice he made the round, then, seeking scenes of further interest,
pushed open the swinging doors of Rubio City's most popular place of
amusement--the Gold Bar saloon.
At a table in one corner two men--one tall, darkfaced, coatless,
with unbuttoned vest, leather wrist-guards, and a heavy gun loosely
buckled about his slim waist; the other thick-set, heavy, red-faced
--were holding animated conversation over their glasses. That is to
say: the thick, red-faced man was animated. Glaring at his companion
he banged his huge, hairy fist on the table until the glasses
jumped.
"Ye're a domned owld savage wid yer talk. Fwhat the hell is yer
counthry good for as ut is? A thousan' square miles av ut wouldn't
feed a jack-rabbit. 'Tis a blistherin', sizzlin', roastin',
wilderness av sand an' cactus, fit for nothin' but thim side-
winders, horn'-toads, heely-monsters an' all their poisonous
relations, includin' yersilf."
The New Yorker, standing at the end of the bar nearest the table
occupied by Barbara's "uncles," who had just arrived from the Gold
Center mines, heard the words of Pat and turned toward the two
friends with amused interest.
Texas Joe silently lifted his glass and with a look of undisguised
admiration for his belligerent partner, waited for more. More came
with another thump of the huge fist.
"'Tis civilization that ye need, an' 'tis civilization that we're
bringin' to ye, an' 'tis civilization that ye've got to take whether
ye like ut or not. Look at the Seer, now! Wan gintleman wid brains
an' education like him is wort' more to this counthry than all the
hell-roarin' savages like yersilf between the Coast an' Oklahoma,
which is not so much better than it was. We've brung ye money; we've
brung ye schools; we've brung ye railroads; an' we'll kape on
bringin' ye the blissin's an' joys av civilization 'til ye mend yer
ways an' live like Christians."
He paused. Texas was staring with child-like simplicity at the
immaculate figure of the stranger in puttees. Pat turned to follow
the gaze of his companion just as the plainsman drawled softly: "And
you've brought us that." The Irishman's heavy jaw dropped. He gasped
and gulped like an uncouth monster. Then--speechless--he drained his
glass.
"Pardner," drawled Texas, "your remarks is sure edifyin' a heap an'
some convincin'. But I'm still constrained to testify that the real
cause an' reason for the declinin' glory of this yere great western
country is poor shootin'. That same, in turn, bein' caused by the
incomin' herds from the effete East bein' so numerous as to hinder
gun-practice."
"Guns is ut?" interrupted the other with a roar. "A man--mind ye: a
man--should be ashamed to go about all the time wid a cannon tied to
his middle. 'Tis the mark av a child. Look at ye, now, wid all yer
artillery an' me wid fingers that niver pushed a thrigger." He held
out his great paws and studied them admiringly. "Why, ye herrin',
wid thim two hands I could break ye, gun an' all, like I've--"
He was interrupted by a wild-eyed individual who rushed into the
room from the street and, springing toward them, burst forth with:
"Give me your gun, Texas, quick! I ain't got mine on and that damned
Red Hoyt is a layin' for me at the corner!"
Texas Joe dropped his slim hand caressingly on the big forty-five at
his side, leaned easily back in his chair and eyed the excited
citizen in a manner calmly judicial. "Bill, you're comin' is some
opportune. You're sure Johnny-on-the-spot."
"Le' me have yer gun, Tex. Jes' loan her to me! I'll be back in a
minute."
"Oh, I ain't doubtin' that you'd be back all right, Bill. That's
jest the p'int. When you blew in so promisc'us an' interrupted the
meetin', me an' my friend here was jest resolvin' that there's too
much bad shootin' bein' done in this here Rubio town. It's a
spoilin' the fair name an' a ruinin' the reputation of this country.
For which said reason us two undertakes to regulate an' reform
some." He turned with elaborate politeness to Pat. "I voices yer
sentiments correct, pard?"
The Irishman's fist struck the table and his eyes flashed. "To the
thrim av a gnat's heel," he roared.
Texas bowed and continued: "Therefore, Bill, this here's our
verdict. You camp right here peaceable while I go out an' fetch this
Red Hoyt person what's been annoyin' you. We'll stand you up at
fifteen steps, with nothing between to obstruct ceremonies, an' drop
the hat. Me an' my friend referees the job an' undertakes to see
that the remains is duly and properly planted with all regular
honors. Sabe?"
The blood-thirsty one, growling something about attending to his own
funeral and finding a gun somewhere else, went quietly and quickly
out.
Before the pugnacious Pat could voice his disgust and disappointment
at the disappearance of the trouble-hunting citizen, a low,
contemptuous laugh from the well-built stranger at the bar drew the
attention of the two friends. The young man was watching them with
an amused smile.
Texas Joe and the Irishman regarded each other thoughtfully. "Pard,"
said Tex in a low, earnest tone, "do you reckon that there hilarity
was in any ways directed toward this corner of the room?"
The stranger, receiving his change from the bartender, was moving
leisurely toward the door when his way was barred by the heavy bulk
of Pat. There was no misunderstanding the expression on the battle-
scarred features of the Irish gladiator. Eyeing the athletic
Easterner fiercely, he growled with deliberate meaning: "Ye same to
be findin' plenty av amusement in the private affairs av me friend
an' mesilf. D'ye think that we are a coople av hoochy-koochy girls
to be makin' sphort for all the domned dudes that runs to look at us
whin their mammas don't know they're out?"
The other regarded him with well-bred surprise. "Stand aside," he
said curtly.
"Oh, ho! ye will lave widout properly apologizin' for yer outrageous
conduc' will ye? 'Tis an ambulance that ye'll nade to take ye home
whin I've taught ye manners, ye danged yellow-legged cock-a-doodle!"
He lifted his fists and the stranger, without giving back an inch or
exhibiting the slightest suggestion of fear, but rather with the
calm self-confidence of a trained athlete, squared himself for the
encounter.
Eagerly the patrons of the place--miners, cowboys, ranchers,
adventurers, Mexicans, Indians--had gathered around the two men,
delighted with the prospect of what promised to be no tame
exhibition. Already several bets had been placed and critical
estimates and comments on the comparative merits of the two were
being made freely when a hand fell on Pat's uplifted arm. Turning
with an oath of rage at the interruption, the Irishman faced Abe
Lee.
"Hello, Pat! Amusing yourself as usual?" To the angry protests from
the crowd the tall surveyor gave not the slightest heed.
For a moment the Irishman, looking up into that thin, sun-tanned
face, was speechless as though he faced some apparition. Then with a
yell of delight he caught the lank form of the Seer's assistant in a
bear-like hug. "For the love av Gawd is ut ye, ye owld sand-rat?
Where the hell did ye drop from, an? fwhat are ye doin' in this
dishreputable company? Look at Uncle Tex, there! The sentimental
owld savage is fair slobberin' wid delight an' eagerness to git at
ye. Come, come; we must have a dhrink."
As quickly as it had risen the storm had passed. The crowd, as if
moved by a single impulse, separated and the room was filled with
loud talk and laughter. Glancing around, Pat's eye met the still
defiant look of the stranger who had not moved from his place but
stood calmly watching the Irishman and Abe as if waiting the
pleasure of the man who had challenged him.
The Irishman grinned in appreciation. "Howld on a minut," he said to
Abe who was moving away with Texas Joe toward a vacant table. Then
to the stranger: "I axe yer pardon, Sorr, for goin' off me head that
way. 'Tis a habit I have, worse luck to me--bein' sensitive, do ye
see, about me personal appearance an' some wishful for a bit av
honest enjoyment. Av ye'll have a dhrink wid me an' my friends here
I'll take ut kindly until we can find some betther cause for
grievance."
The young man's tense figure relaxed. A smile broke over his face.
"And I beg your pardon," he said heartily. "The fact is I was not
laughing at you at all but at the way you two men called the bluff
of that fellow who wanted the gun. I should have said so and
apologized but I, too, was a little upset and thrown off my guard."
"Faith, ut looked to me that ye were thrown on your guard. 'Tis the
science ye have or I'm a Dutchman." He eyed the athletic limbs, deep
chest, broad shoulders and well-set head, with eyes that twinkled
his approval. "Some day--But niver mind now! Come." He led the way
to the table.
As they seated themselves Pat regarded the surveyor with pleased
interest. "Well, well! 'tis a most unexpected worrld. Av 'twas the
owld divil himsilf that clapped his hand on me arm I'd be no more
surprised than I was to see the lad here. Tell us, me bhoy, fwhat
'tis that's brung ye here."
"Haven't you two been to see Barbara yet?" the surveyor demanded as
though charging them with some neglected duty.
"We have not; an' by that ye will know that we've been in this town
less than an hour by Tex's watch that Barbara give him an' that he
lost down the shaft at Gold Center."
When the surveyor had explained his presence in Rubio City and Texas
and Pat had agreed to join the King's Basin party, the stranger
said: "I think it is quite time now that I introduce myself. You are
Mr. Lee, I believe."
Abe assented and with his two companions regarded him with interest.
Taking a letter from his pocket and handing it to the surveyor, the
young man continued: "I am a civil engineer. I have instructions
from the Chief to report to you. My name is Willard Holmes."
The next morning the young engineer from the East presented his card
at the Pioneer Bank and asked for Mr. Worth. The man who received
the correctly engraved bit of pasteboard merely nodded toward the
other end of the long partition of polished wood, plate glass and
bronze bars. "You'll find him back there, Mr. Holmes."
The New Yorker smiled at the provincialism but sought the banker
without further ceremony.
Closing the door with one hand Jefferson Worth with the other
indicated the chair at the end of his desk. "Sit down."
"You have a letter from Mr. Greenfield relative to my coming?" asked
Willard Holmes.
The banker lifted a typewritten sheet from his desk, glanced at it
and turned back to his visitor. "Yes," he said.
The involuntary movement was the instinctive act of one who
habitually verifies every statement. Then, as those expressionless
blue eyes were fixed on the stranger's face, the engineer's
sensation was as though from behind that gray mask something reached
out to grasp his innermost thoughts and emotions. He felt strangely
transparent and exposed as one, alone in his lighted chamber at
night, might feel someone in the dark without, watching through the
window. Presently the colorless, exact voice of Jefferson Worth
asked: "This is your first visit West?"
"Yes sir. My work has been altogether in New York and the New
England states."
"Five years with the New York Contracting and Construction Company?"
said Jefferson Worth exactly, laying his hand again on the letter on
his desk.
"Yes. For the past two years I have had charge of their more
important operations." The engineer's tone was a shade impressive.
But there was not the faintest shadow of a hint in the face or
manner of that man in the revolving chair to intimate that he was
impressed. The visitor might as well have spoken to the steel door
of the big safe in the other room. "You are well acquainted with Mr.
Greenfield and his associates?"
"My father and Mr. Greenfield were boyhood friends and college
classmates," the engineer explained. "Since the death of my father
when I was a little chap, I have lived with Uncle Jim. He was my
guardian until I became of age."
The young man did not think it necessary to add that the death of
his father had left him penniless and that his father's friend, who
had never married, had reared and educated the child of his old
classmate as his own son. Neither did he explain that his rapid
advancement in his profession was due largely to the powerful
influence of the capitalist and those closely associated with him,
together with the strength of the proud social position to which he
was born, rather than to hard work and experience. Probably Willard
Holmes himself did not realize how much these things had added to
his own native ability and technical training. He had never known
anything else but these things and he accepted them as unconsciously
as his voice was colored with the accent of the cultured East.
"How do you size up this King's Basin proposition?" questioned the
banker.
Again Willard Holmes smiled at the western man's words. "Sizing up"
and "proposition" were pleasingly novel forms of expression to him.
"Really," he answered, "I haven't gone into it very thoroughly as
yet. Mr. Greenfield asked me to come out because he and his
associates felt"--he paused; perhaps it would be just as well not to
say what Mr. Greenfield and his associates felt--"that with my
experience in connection with large corporations I could be of value
to them in certain phases of the work," he finished. He wondered if
the man, who listened with such an air of carefully considering
every word and mentally reaching out for whatever lay back of the
verbal expression, had grasped what he had been about to say.
Jefferson Worth waited and Holmes continued: "Mr. Greenfield and his
friends are very anxious that you should come in with them on the
organization of this company, Mr. Worth; that is, of course,
providing the scheme proves to be practicable. They instructed me to
urge you personally to consider their proposal favorably and to ask
you, by all means, to represent them on this expedition if possible.
They realize that a man of your recognized ability and standing in
the financial world, particularly in the West, in close touch as you
are with Capital and conditions in this part of the country and no
doubt familiar with the Reclamation work, would be a valuable
addition to their strength. In fact I may say they would depend
largely upon your judgment as to whether the scheme was practicable
from a business standpoint. On your side I am sure you recognize the
advantage of allying yourself with such a group of capitalists, who
are strong enough to finance any undertaking, no matter how great.
Their interests are already enormous. As you know, they operate only
on the largest scale and, if this survey justifies the report
already made, they will make a big thing out of this for everyone
interested."
The cold, exact voice of Jefferson Worth came as if from a machine
incapable of inflection. "I have written Mr. Greenfield that I would
look into the proposition for him. I will go out with the outfit.
Have you seen Abe Lee?"
"I met him last night and we had a little talk over things. I
confess I was a little surprised."
"Well--that he is in charge. I was instructed to report to him. I
find that he has had no schooling whatever; that, in fact, he is
nothing but a kind of a self-educated surveyor. I have no doubt that
he is a good, practical fellow, but it seems to me somewhat reckless
to put him in such a responsible position."
Jefferson Worth did not say that he himself had had no more
schooling than the Seer's lieutenant. Perhaps that, also, was not
necessary to explain. He did say: "We have only one standard in the
West, Mr. Holmes."