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Emslie nodded agreement; and Markham drawled:
"Don't want his splay-footed beasts, and won't lend him my good Clydesdales to spoil. Count out the bills, Gerald; his hand is shaking."
Carlyon protested that he was a sportsman and paid his debts, but they overruled him.
"Silly thing to do, unless you're made," Markham declared. Then he turned to Gerald. "What's become of the younger brother? Never see him now."
"Oh, he's reformed. On the whole, it's just as well, for there's not room for two gamblers in the family. Besides, the Americans seem to have got hold of him: they live like Methodists."
"You mean the girl has? Devilish handsome; has a grand way of looking at you. Ask Carlyon; he knows."
Carlyon colored under Markham's broadly humorous gaze.
"Miss Harding won't trouble herself about Lance," he said. "I may add that she doesn't appreciate a graceful compliment."
"Smacked your face?" suggested Markham with a chuckle. "Must be going.
Give me my coat."
A newspaper and some letters fell out of a pocket as he put it on, and he picked them up.
"Quite forgot. Met the mail-carrier as I was driving in. Better look what wheat is doing."
Carlyon eagerly opened the paper.
"Down again two cents at Chicago! Winnipeg will follow."
"There's a certain cure," said Markham thickly. "All stop plowing. If you do nothing long enough, 'must send the market up. Call it a brilliant idea; wonder n.o.body else thought of it. You look sober, Emslie. Come and help me into my rig."
They went out, and a few minutes afterward a furious beat of hoofs and a rattle of wheels rang out across the prairie.
"I hope he will get home without breaking his neck," Carlyon said to Gerald.
"Oh, Markham can take care of himself. But we have something else to think about now."
"That's true," Carlyon agreed with a depressed air. "I took your advice and told that fellow in the Pit to buy wheat; but I wish I'd heard Harding's speech at the council before I made the deal. Now it's clear that I'm dipped pretty deep." He picked up the letters that were scattered among the cards and started as he saw the embossed stamp on one of them. "It's from my broker; I'll soon know the worst."
Gerald, lighting a cigarette, watched the tense expression of the boy's face as he read the letter, and for a few moments nothing was said.
Carlyon looked crushed, but Gerald's position was too serious to allow of his sympathizing much. Taking advantage of his friends' love of excitement, he had won a number of small sums at cards, but this was of no account against what he owed. After a moment Carlyon laid a statement of account before him.
"You can see how much I'm out."
"Can't you carry it over?"
"Impossible," Carlyon answered dejectedly. "I didn't actually buy the grain; I've got to find the difference. Besides, what would be the use of holding on, if wheat's still going to drop?"
"It's awkward," Gerald agreed. "You might get some exemption under the Homesteads Act, but this broker could sell you up. Would your people do anything?"
"They won't be asked. Things were not going well with them when I left, and I guess they find it hard enough to keep d.i.c.k at college and provide for the girls. They gave me a good start, but it was understood that I'd get nothing more."
"Then the only remedy is to borrow the money here."
Carlyon laughed.
"Who'd lend it to me? Besides, if the Colonel knew how I was fixed, he'd turn me out of the settlement."
"I know a man in Winnipeg who does this kind of business, but he'd charge you high and want a bond. That means he'd seize your land in a year or two if you couldn't pay."
"The other fellow would seize it now," Carlyon said with eagerness. "If I could get the money, I'd have time to see what could be done, and something might turn up. Will you introduce me?"
The matter was arranged before Gerald left; and two days later they were in Winnipeg. They found Davies willing to do business. Indeed, after making a few difficulties as an excuse for raising the interest, he supplied Carlyon with the money he needed, and when the men left his office he lighted a cigar with a satisfied smile. He now held two mortgages on land at Allenwood, and he thought that he could make good use of them if, as he expected, the loans were not repaid. Then it was possible that Mowbray might bring him another customer. He saw a big profit for himself, and trouble for the Allenwood settlers, when the reckoning came.
Shortly after Gerald's visit to Winnipeg, one of his neighbors returned from England, where he had gone to look into matters connected with some property he had recently inherited. His absence had been a relief to Beatrice, and she was especially disturbed to learn that on his arrival he had spent an hour in private talk with her father. Brand had continually shown strong admiration for her, which she by no means reciprocated. She did not actually dislike the man; but his attentions annoyed her. She knew, however, that he enjoyed Colonel Mowbray's full approval. He came of good family and his character was irreproachable; moreover, being past forty, he had outgrown all youthful rashnesses. Of rather handsome person and polished manners, Brand was generally characterized by staid gravity, and Mowbray considered his views exceptionally sound.
Beatrice was keenly curious about what he had said to her father. She imagined that her mother knew, but no hint was given to her, and when she met Brand it was always in the company of others and there was nothing to be gathered from his manner. It was, however, not often that he displayed his sentiments.
The thaw had begun when she walked home from the Broadwood farm one afternoon. The snow had vanished as if by magic, and shallow lagoons glittered among the bleached gra.s.s. The sky was a brilliant blue, and rounded clouds with silver edges rolled across it before the fresh northwest breeze which would blow persistently until summer was done.
Their swift shadows streaked the plain and pa.s.sed, leaving it suffused with light. There was a genial softness in the air.
Beatrice picked her way cautiously toward a straggling bluff, for the ponds along its edge had overflowed and the ground was marish. On reaching the woods she stopped in a sheltered nook to enjoy the suns.h.i.+ne. The birches and poplars were bare, but their stems were changing color and the twigs had lost their dry and brittle look. The willows in a hollow were stained with vivid hues by the rising sap, and there was a flush of green among the gra.s.s. Small purple flowers like crocuses were pus.h.i.+ng through the sod. From high overhead there fell a harsh, clanging cry, and the girl, looking up, saw a flock of brent geese picked out in a wedge against the sky. Behind came a wedge of mallard, and farther off, gleaming snowily, a flight of sandhill cranes.
Spring was in the air; the birds had heard its call, and were pressing on toward the polar marshes, following the sun. Beatrice felt a curious stirring of her blood. It was half pleasant, half painful, for while she responded to the gladness that pervaded everything the suns.h.i.+ne kissed, she was conscious of a disturbing longing, a mysterious discontent. She would not try to a.n.a.lyze her feelings, but she felt that her life was narrow and somehow incomplete.
She was startled presently by a drumming of hoofs; and she frowned as Brand rode out of the bluff. He had seen her, and she decided not to try to avoid him by walking on. If she must face a crisis, it was better to get it over. Brand got down and turned to her with a smile. He looked well in his wide, gray hat and his riding dress, for the picturesqueness of the fringed deerskin jacket, which was then the vogue at Allenwood, did not detract from his air of dignity. His features were regular, but his expression was somewhat cold.
"I'm glad we have met, and I'll confess that I expected to find you here. In fact, I came to look for you," he said with a smile.
Beatrice knew what was coming. While she felt that it would be better to meet the situation frankly, she nevertheless shrank from doing so.
"I have seen so little of you since you came home," she said, partly to defer his declaration, "that I haven't had an opportunity for expressing my sympathy."
"It was a shock," he answered. "I hadn't seen either of my cousins since they were boys, but we were good friends then, and I never expected to succeed them. Their yacht was run down at night, and when the steamer got her boat out only the paid hand was left."
"Will you go back to England now to live?"
"I think I'll stay at Allenwood. One gets used to Western ways--although there's a good deal to be said for either course, and it doesn't altogether depend on me."
Beatrice hesitated a moment, then:
"There is some one else to please?" she asked with charming innocence.
Brand drew a quick breath as he gazed at the young face so near him. She was leaning against a poplar trunk, the sun fretting her with gold between the bare branches, the wind caressing a few loose strands of hair that were blown across her cheek.
"I will please the girl I hope to marry," he said in a strained voice.
"She loves the prairie, and she shall have her choice. I think you know, Beatrice, that I have long been waiting for you."
Beatrice was annoyed to find herself blus.h.i.+ng.
"I'm sorry," she faltered. "You know I tried to show you--you must see it was difficult."