Slowly, day by day, the surveying party under the Seer pushed deeper
and deeper into the awful desolation of The King's Basin Desert.
They were the advance force of a mighty army ordered ahead by Good
Business--the master passion of the race. Their duty was to learn
the strength of the enemy, to measure its resources, to spy out its
weaknesses and to gather data upon which a campaign would be
planned.
Under the Seer the expedition was divided into several smaller
parties, each of which was assigned to certain defined districts.
Here and there, at seemingly careless intervals in the wide expanse,
the white tents of the division camps shone through the many colored
veils of the desert. Tall, thin columns of dust lifted into the sky
from the water wagons that crawled ceaselessly from water hole to
camp and from camp to water hole--hung in long clouds above the
supply train laboring heavily across the dun plain to and from Rubio
City--or rose in quick puffs and twisting spirals from the feet of
some saddle horse bearing a messenger from the Chief to some distant
lieutenant.
Every morning, from each of the camps, squads of khaki-clad men
bearing transit and level, stake and pole and flag--the weapons of
their warfare--put out in different directions into the vast silence
that seemed to engulf them. Every evening the squads returned,
desert-stained and weary, to their rest under the lonesome stars.
Every morning the sun broke fiercely up from the long level of the
eastward plain to pour its hot strength down upon these pigmy
creatures, who dared to invade the territory over which he had, for
so many ages, held undisputed dominion. Every evening the sun
plunged fiercely down behind the purple wall of mountains that shut
in the Basin on the west, as if to gather strength in some nether
world for to-morrow's fight.
Always there was the same flood of white light from the deep, dry
sky that was uncrossed by shred of cloud; always the same wide,
tawny waste, harshly glaring near at hand--filled with awful
mysteries under the many colored mists of the distance; until the
eyes ached and the soul cried out in wonder at it all. Always there
were the same deep nights, with the lonely stars so far away in the
velvet purple darkness; the soft breathing of the desert; the
pungent smell of greasewood and salt-bush; the weird, quavering call
of the ground owl; or the wild coyote chorus, as if the long lost
spirits of long ago savage races cried out a dreadful warning to
these invaders.
And in all of this the land made itself felt against these men in
the silent menace, the still waiting, the subtle call, the promise,
the threat and the challenge of La Palma de la Mano de Dios.
To Barbara, who rode often in those days to the very rim of the
Basin, there to search the wild, wide land with straining eyes for
signs of her friends, the white glare of the camps was lost in the
bewildering maze of color. The columns, clouds and spirals of dust--
save perhaps from a near supply wagon coming in or passing out--
could not be distinguished from the whirling dust-devils that danced
always over the hot plains. The toiling pigmy dots of the little
army were far beyond her vision's range. It was as though the fierce
land had swallowed up horses, wagons and men. Only through the
frequent letters brought by the freighters did she know that all was
going well.
Perhaps the gray lizard that climbed to the top of a line stake
wondered at the strange new growth that had sprung so suddenly from
the familiar soil; or perhaps the horned-toad, scuttling to cover,
marveled at the strange sounds as the stakes were driven and man
called to man figures and directions. Perhaps the scaly side-winder,
springing his warning rattle at the approaching step, questioned
what new enemy this was; or the lone buzzard, wheeling high over
head, watched the tiny moving figures with wondering hopefulness,
and the coyote, that hushed for a little his wild music to follow up
the wind this strange new scent, laughed at the Seer's dream.
These lines of stakes that every day stretched farther and farther
into and across the waste seemed, in the wideness of the land,
pitifully foolish. Looking back over the lines, the men who set them
could scarcely distinguish the way they had come. But they knew that
the stakes were there. They knew that some day that other, mightier
company, the main army, would move along the way they had marked to
meet the strength of the barren waste with the strength of the great
river and take for the race the wealth of the land. The sound of
human voices was flat and ineffectual in that age-old solitude, but
the speakers knew that following their feeble voices would come the
shouting, ringing, thundering chorus of the life that was to follow
them into that silent land of death.
With the slow passing of the weeks came the trying out and testing
of character inevitable to such a work. The concealing habits of
civilization were dropped. Kindly, useful conventionalities were
lost. Face to face with the unconquered forces of nature, nothing
remained but the real strength or weakness of the individual
himself. In some there were developed unguessed powers of endurance
that bore the hard days without flinching; cheerful optimism that
laughed at the appalling immensity of the task; strength of spirit
that made a jest of galling discomforts; courage that smiled in the
face of dangers. These were the strength of the party. Some there
were who grew sullen, quarrelsome, and vicious in a kind of mad
rebellion. These must be held in check, controlled and governed by
the Seer with the assistance of Abe Lee and his helpers. Some became
silent and moody, faint hearted and afraid. These were strengthened
and guarded and given fresh courage. Some grew peevish and fretful,
whining and complaining. These were disciplined wisely, forced
gently into line. Some staggered and fell by the way. These were
sent back and the ranks closed up. But the work--always the work
went on.
To Willard Holmes the life was a slow torture, a revelation and an
education. He found himself stripped of everything upon which he was
accustomed to rely--family traditions, social position, influential
friends, scholarship, experience in the world to which he was born--
all these were nothing in The Hollow of God's Hand. Slowly he
learned that the power of such wealth is limited to certain fields.
New York was very far away. He felt that he had been hopelessly
banished to a strange world. Many times he would have thrown it all
up and turned back with other deserters, but there was red blood in
his veins. Stubborn pride and the thought of the girl who had hoped
that he would "learn the language of her country" enabled him to
hold on.
Once he ventured to speak to the Chief in a hopeless voice of the
evident impossibility of ever converting that terrible land into a
habitable country, and the Seer, strong in the strength of his
dream, had looked at him from the still depth of his brown eyes
without a word--looked until the younger man had turned away, his
cheeks flushed with shame and his spirit doing homage to the
strength of the master spirit of the work. And the eastern engineer
remembered with new understanding his talks with Barbara Worth.
When they pulled the dead coyote from the only water hole within two
days' travel and Holmes nearly fainted at the sickening sight, it
was Texas Joe who saved the day for him by remarking, with an air of
philosophical musing, after a deep draught of the tepid, tainted
water: "Hit ain't so bad as you might think, Mr. Holmes, onct your
oilfactory nerves has become somewhat regulated to the aroma and
your palate has been eddicated to the point of appreciatin' the
deliciously foreign flavor. In the judgment of some connysoors, it
has several points the lead of them imported fancy drinks you get in
Frisco."
When a Mexican died horribly from the bite of a rattlesnake, and
Holmes himself was barely saved from a like fate by the prompt
action and ready knowledge of Abe Lee, it was the slow smile of the
desert-bred surveyor that stiffened him to go on.
And when he was nearly beaten by a three days' sand-storm so
searching that even the flap-jacks and bacon gritted in his teeth
and his blood-shot eyes smarted in his head like coals of fire and
his skin felt as though it had been sand-papered, when he would have
sold his soul for a bath and actually began to get his things
together in readiness for the next wagon out, it was Pat, who, with
the devilish ingenuity of an Irish imp, mocked and jeered at him for
a quitter, "fit to act only as lady's maid or to serve soft dhrinks
in a corner drug-sthore," until his fainting heart took fire and,
cursing his tormentor with all the oaths he could muster, he offered
to whip, single-handed, the whole grinning camp and stayed.
Thus he was advanced to the second degree, when he began to sense
the spirit of the untamed land and of the men who went to meet it
with sheer joy of the conquest; when he began to glory in the very
greatness of the task; and the long dormant spirit of his ancestors
stirred within him as he caught glimpses of the vision that inspired
the Seer or, perhaps it should be written, the vision that tempted
his employers, James Greenfield and his fellow capitalists.
He was still far from ready for the final degree; but even that
might come.
Through all those hard days Jefferson Worth moved with the same
careful, precise, certain manner that distinguished him in his work
at home. Even the desert sun that so tanned, blistered and blackened
the faces of his companions could not mark the gray pallor of that
mask-like face. No disturbing incident or unforeseen difficulty
could wring from him an exclamation or change the measured tones of
his colorless voice. He seemed to accept everything as though he had
foreseen, carefully considered and dismissed it from his mind before
it came to pass. Day after day he rode in every direction over the
land within easy reach of the many camps; familiarizing himself with
every detail of the work, observing soil, studying conditions,
poring over maps and figures with the Seer, verifying estimates,
listening to and taking part in the many councils of the leaders.
But not once did anyone catch a hint of what was going on behind
those expressionless blue eyes that seemed to see everything without
effort and to be incapable of expressing the emotions of the soul
within.
To the men he was the visible representative of that invisible power
that willed their going forth. He was Capital--Money--Business
incarnate. They set him apart as one not of their world. In his
presence laughter was hushed, jests were unspoken. Silently they
waited for him to speak first. When he conversed with them they
answered thoughtfully in subdued tones, seeming to feel that their
words were received by one who placed upon them undreamed-of values.
Filled as these men were with the enthusiasm of their work, they
were never unconscious of the knowledge that but for the power
represented by Jefferson Worth their work would be impossible.
Small wonder, then, that there was consternation in the headquarters
camp that night when Pat appeared, hat in hand, before the company
of leaders in the Seer's office tent. "I beg yer pardon, Sorr."
"What is it, Pat?" asked the Seer, and all eyes were turned upon the
burly Irishman, whose face and voice as well as his presence at that
hour betrayed some unusual incident. "'Tis this, Sorr. Has anywan
seen Mr. Worth this avenin'?"
"Why no, he was not," returned the Seer. "But it is nothing unusual
for him to be late. Have you asked the cook?"
"We have, Sorr. Ye see, whin ut come time to turn in an' he hadn't
shown up an' Tex seen that his horse wasn't wid the bunch, we got a
bit unaisy like. We axed the cook, an' we've been to his tent, an'
we've axed the men."
"Perhaps he has put up at one of the other camps," suggested a
surveyor.
"That's not like, Sorr, for he rode northeast this mornin'. Me an'
Tex watched him go; an' there's divil a camp in that direction as we
all know."
"He surely intended to return here or he would have told us," said
the Seer. "You know how careful he is. What do you think, Abe?"
Before Abe could answer a Mexican ran up, and Pat, turning, hauled
him into the tent by the neck. "Fwhat the hell is ut, ye greaser?"
"Senor Texas send me quick," the little brown man panted, bowing low
to the company, sombrero in hand. "Senor Worth's horse, he just
come. In the saddle is no one. Senor Worth he is not come. I think
he is gone."
Before the Mexican finished speaking there was a rush of feet and he
was alone. With a shrug of his shoulders and a flash of his white
teeth, he turned leisurely to follow, saying half aloud: "It is all
in La Palma de la Mano de Dios, Senor Worth. Maybe so you come back,
maybe this time not." He stood for a moment looking into the black
vault of the night; then, with another shrug, retired to his blanket
to sleep.
Abe Lee was first to reach the corral where Texas Joe, by the light
of a lantern, was examining Mr. Worth's horse. No word was exchanged
between them while the surveyor in turn looked carefully over the
animal. The others, coming up, stood silent a little apart, waiting
for the word of these two.
"What do you make of it, Abe?" asked the Seer when the long surveyor
turned toward him.
Deliberately rolling a cigarette, Abe answered from a cloud of
smoke: "He is left afoot too far out to walk in, likely. We'll go
for him in the morning."
A startled exclamation came from Willard Holmes, but no one heeded
as the surveyor turned to Texas Joe. "How do you figure it, Tex?"
"The same," came the laconic answer. "This here cayuse wasn't broke
to stand. He must have been tied somewheres, 'cause the reins are
busted." He pointed to the pieces of leather hanging from the bit.
"The canteen is gone. Jefferson Worth is too old a hand on the
desert to leave it on the horse. He likely tied the pony to a bush
and went to climb a hill or something. Mr. Hawss breaks loose and
pulls for home. It happened a good way out, 'cause the pony's pretty
well tired, which he wouldn't a-been, travelin' light, if Mr. Worth
hadn't ridden some distance before it happened. An' if he was nearer
the pony would have been in earlier. He'll likely show us a smoke in
the morning and even if he don't it'll be easy to trail him, 'cause
there ain't no wind. Will I go, sir?" He looked at the Chief.
Abe assented and the men turned toward the tents while Texas led the
tired horse away.
The New York engineer approached the Chief. "Do I understand, sir,
that you propose to do nothing until morning?"
The Seer faced him. "There is nothing to do, Mr. Holmes," he said
simply.
Willard Holmes was amazed at the man's apparent unconcern. "Nothing
to do?" he exclaimed. "Why don't you arouse the men and send them in
every direction to search? Why man, don't you realize the situation?
Mr. Worth may be hurt. He may even be dying alone out there! I
protest! It's monstrous! It's cowardly, inhuman, to do nothing!"
The company, attracted by the loud words, paused. Abe Lee, standing
beside his Chief, rolled another cigarette while the engineer was
speaking.
The Seer answered patiently: "But Mr. Holmes, we could accomplish
nothing by such a search as you suggest. The territory is too large
to cover with a hundred times the number of men we have in camp. At
daylight, when they can follow his trail, Abe and Tex will ride to
him as fast as their horses can go. Granting that the worst you
suggest may be true, our plan is the only sane way." "But I protest,
sir. You should make the attempt. I will not submit to idly doing
nothing while a life is in danger--particularly that of a man like
Mr. Worth. I shall go alone if no one will help me, and"--he
straightened himself haughtily--"I shall report this to Mr.
Greenfield and the men interested with him in this work."
At the last words one of those rare changes swept over the big
engineer, and the witnesses saw a side of the Chief's nature that
was seldom revealed. His eyes flashed and his face hardened as he
burst forth in tones that startled his hearers: "Report me? You!
Report and be damned, sir. I was old at this work when you were a
sucking babe. These men were learning the desert when you were
attending a fashionable dancing school. Why, you damned lily-
fingered tenderfoot, you couldn't find your way five hundred yards
in this country without a guide or a compass. Now, sir, I'm running
this outfit and if you have any protests against my cowardly
inhumanity I advise you to smother them in your manly breast, or, by
hell! I'll ship you out on the first wagon to-morrow morning and let
you report to Greenfield that you were fired because you didn't know
your work yourself and hadn't intelligence enough to listen to those
who did!"
The Chief paused for breath, and Willard Holmes, whose experience
with large corporations was expected to make him peculiarly valuable
to the capitalists who sent him out, turned away with what dignity
he could command.
"Howly Mither!" came a hoarse whisper from Pat to Abe; "I made sure
the poor bhoy wud shrivel up. Sich a witherin', blistherin' tongue
lashin' wud scorch the hide av the owld divil himsilf." He looked
admiringly after the Seer. "D'ye think, now, that the poor lad will
be afther tacklin' the job alone, like he said? Sure, ut's nerve he
has all right but he lacks judgment."
"Yes, he has the nerve all right," returned Abe slowly, "and we'd
better keep an eye on him. Tell Tex."
Willard Holmes knew that he owed his Chief an apology and he
promised himself to make it in the morning. But neither the
explanation of the Seer nor the bitter humiliation that he had
brought upon himself could turn his thoughts from Mr. Worth alone on
the desert. To sleep was impossible. The banker might be----As he
tossed in his blankets the engineer pictured to himself a hundred
things that might have happened to Barbara's father.
It was some two hours later when Pat touched Abe Lee on the
shoulder.
"All right, Pat," said the surveyor, fully awake and in possession
of all his senses in an instant.
"There's a light bobbin' off into nowhere an' the lad's blankets are
impty."
Fifteen minutes later a quiet voice within three feet of Willard
Holmes asked: "Shall I go with you, sir?"
The eastern man jumped like a nervous woman. He had not heard the
approach of the surveyor, who walked with the step of an Indian. "I
couldn't sleep," he explained. "I thought I would follow the tracks
a little way out at least. He may not be so far away as you think."
After Abe had taken time to make his cigarette he spoke
meditatively. "Mr. Worth rode a horse."
"I understand that," returned the man with the lantern tartly. "I
saw him go this morning and I saw the horse to-night. This is the
track."
From another cloud of smoke came the quiet, respectful answer: "But
this is a mule's track, Mr. Holmes. It is Manuel Ramirez's mule.
See, he has a broken shoe on the off fore-foot. I noticed it
yesterday when I sent Manuel to hunt a water hole. Besides, Mr.
Worth rode northeast; not in this direction."