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Two Wyoming Girls and Their Homestead Claim.
by Carrie L. Marshall.
TWO WYOMING GIRLS
CHAPTER I
I GO ON AN ERRAND
A fierce gust of wind and rain struck the windows, and Jessie, on her way to the breakfast table, dish in hand, paused to listen.
"Raining again!" she exclaimed, setting the dish down emphatically.
"It seems to me that it has rained every day this spring. When it hasn't poured here in the valley, it has more than made up for it in the mountains."
"You are more than half right," father said, drawing his chair up to the table. "Is breakfast ready, dear? I am going to work in the mines to-day, and I'm in something of a hurry."
"Going to work in the mines!" Jessie echoed the words, as, I am sure, I did also. I was sitting in the corner dressing little Ralph, or, to be strictly accurate, trying to dress him. No three year-old that ever lived could be more exasperating than he sometimes was during that ordeal or could show a more p.r.o.nounced distaste for the bondage of civilized garments.
Jessie made haste to dish up the breakfast, but she inquired: "Do you remember, papa, what that old miner who was here the other day told us about mines in the wet season? About what was liable to happen sometimes, and did happen here once, a good many years ago?"
"I don't know that I do," father answered, glancing toward Ralph and me, to see if we were ready. As we were anything but that, he continued; "I guess I won't wait for you children."
"Don't, please!" I exclaimed, "Ralph is a perfect little buzz-saw this morning. Keep still, Ralph!"
"Me want to do barefoot! Me want to wade in 'e puddle!" cried the child, pulling one soft little foot out of the stocking that I had just succeeded in getting upon it.
"Ralph!" I cried, angrily: "I've a good notion to spank you!"
"Don't, Leslie!" father interposed, mildly; "I remember so well how I liked to wade in the mud-puddles when I was a little shaver; but it's too early in the season, and too cold for that sort of sport now. So, Ralph, my boy, let sister dress you, and don't hinder."
Ralph always obeyed father's slightest word, no matter how gently the word was spoken; so now he sat demurely silent while I completed his toilet.
"What was it that your friend, the miner, said, Jessie?" father asked, as Jessie took her seat and poured out his coffee.
"He said that there had been so much rain on the mountains, and that the Crusoe mines were on such a low level that there was some danger of an inrush of water, like that which ruined the Lost Chance, before we came here."
"I recollect hearing something about the Lost Chance," father said, going on with his breakfast indifferently. "There may have been water crevices in it. The accident was probably caused by them--and neglect."
"I don't see how it could be all due to neglect," Jessie persisted.
"The miner said that the springs and rivers were all booming full, just as they are now. People never thought of danger from the water, because it was so often warm and dry in the valley--as it is, you know, often, even when it is raining hard on the mountains. The miner said that the men went on with their work in the mine, as usual, until, one afternoon, the timbered walls of the tunnels slumped in like so much wet sand. What had been underground pa.s.sages became, in a moment, underground rivers, for the water that had been held back and dammed up so long just poured in in a drowning flood. He said that the rainfall seeped through the bogs up on the mountains, and fed underground reservoirs that held the water safely until they were overtaxed. When that happened the water would burst out, finding an outlet for itself in some new place. The only reason that any one of the force of thirty men usually employed in the mine escaped was that the accident occurred just as they were putting on a new s.h.i.+ft. I remember very well what he told us."
"I see that you do," father responded, with a thoughtful glance at her earnest face, "but I reckon he rather overdid the business. These old miners are always full of whims and forecasts; they are as superst.i.tious as sailors."
"What he told was not superst.i.tion; it was a fact," replied Jessie, with unexpected logic.
Father smiled. "Well, anyway, don't you get to worrying about the Gray Eagle, daughter. It's rather damp these days, I admit, but as safe as this kitchen."
"Do you really think so, papa?" Jessie asked, evidently rea.s.sured.
"Well, perhaps not quite as safe," father answered, with half a smile.
"It's a good deal darker for one thing, you know, and there are noises--"
He lapsed into that kind of listening silence that comes to one who is striving to recall something that has been heard, not seen, or felt, and I was about to insist upon a further elucidation of those subterranean sounds when the door opened and a man, whom father had hired for the day, put in his head:
"Say, Mr. Gordon, I can't find a spade anywhere," he announced.
"Well, there!" father exclaimed, with a disturbed look, "our spade was left at the mine the last day that we worked there."
"That's too bad!" the man, who was a neighbor, as neighbors go on the frontier, said regretfully. "I can go back home and get mine, but the team's. .h.i.tched up; it's stopped raining, an' there's a load of posts on the wagon. Seems 'most a pity for me to take time to go an' hunt up a spade, but I reckon I'll have to do it. I never saw the man yet that could dig post holes without one."
"Oh, no, Reynolds, don't stop your work for that; I'll have to bring mine down; it's about as near to get it from the Gray Eagle as to go to one of the neighbors; you just go on with your work."
Reynolds withdrew accordingly, and, as the door closed upon him, father said:
"I'm anxious to earn every dollar I can to help fence that wheat field, before Horton's cattle 'accidentally' stray into it. I was out to look at it this morning. The field looks as if covered with a green carpet, it's coming up so thick. I count it good luck to be able to get Reynolds to go on with the fence-building while I work in the mine, for I can exchange work to pay him, while the pay that comes from the mine is so much cash."
"And when we get our t.i.tle clear, won't I shoo Mr. Horton's cattle to the ends of the earth!" I said, resentfully, for we all understood well enough that the reason that father was so anxious to earn money was to pay for the final "proving up" on his homestead claim, as well as to build fences. "I'm teaching Guard to 'heel' on purpose to keep track of those cattle," I concluded, audaciously, for father didn't approve of a policy of retaliation.
"Horton's cattle are not to blame," he said now, but the shadow that always came over his patient face at the mention of our intractable neighbor settled heavily upon it as he spoke.
"I know the cattle are not to blame," I retorted, with a good deal of temper. "I just wish that their master himself would come out and trample on our corn and wallow in our wheat field, instead of driving his cattle up so that they may do it; I'd set Guard on him with the greatest pleasure."
"Now, now, Leslie, you shouldn't talk so!" father remonstrated gently.
But here Jessie, whose disposition is much more placid than mine, broke in, abruptly:
"I don't blame Leslie for feeling so, father. Only think, we've been on this place nearly five years, and we've never yet raised a crop, because Mr. Horton's cattle, no matter where they may be ranging, always get up here just in time--the right time--to do the most damage. The other neighbors' cattle hardly ever stray into our fields, and when they do the neighbors are good about it. Think of the time when Mr. Rollins's herd got into the corn field and ate the corn rows down, one after another. Mr. Rollins came after them himself, and paid the damage, without a word of complaint. Besides, he said that it shouldn't happen again; and it didn't. When has Mr. Horton ever done a thing like that?"
"He's been kept busy other ways," father said, and his voice had none of the resentment that Jessie's expressed. "The last time that his cattle got in here I went to see him about it, and he said that the field was a part of the range, being unfenced, and that any lawyer in the United States would sustain him in saying so. He was quite right, too--only he was not neighborly."
"Neighborly! I should say not," Jessie exclaimed, with a lowering brow. "His horses have trampled down our garden and girdled all our fruit trees, even to the Seckel pear that mother brought from grandfather's."
"I know; it is very trying," father said, stifling a sigh; "but it can do no good to dwell on these things, daughter. An enemy of any kind does you more injury when he destroys your peace of mind, and causes you to harbor revengeful feelings, than he can possibly achieve in any other way. We must keep up our courage, and make the best of present circ.u.mstances, bad as they sometimes are. A change is bound to come."
"Me wants more breakfuss," Ralph broke in, suddenly, extending his empty milk-cup toward me, his chief servitor. I refilled it from the pitcher beside me, and as I absently crumbled bits of bread into it I sought enlightenment. "I never quite understood, father, why Mr.
Horton is so spiteful toward us."
"It is easily understood, Leslie. He wants this homestead claim, and hopes to weary us into giving it up."
"He can find plenty of other claims," I argued.
"Yes; but not such as this. This is an upper valley, as you know, and just above our claim five mountain streams join the main river as the fingers of a hand join the palm, the main river being the palm. Every square foot of our claim can be irrigated, and it takes in about all of the valley that is worth taking--enough to control the water rights for all the land below us. That is the reason why Horton is trying so hard to dislodge us. He would like to be able to make the ranchmen on the lower ranches come to his terms about the water."
"But the law regulates the water rights," said Jessie.