The Second Western Megapack. Zane Grey

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The Second Western Megapack - Zane Grey

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his judgment. She was immensely proud of him, of his steadiness and dependability, but at rare moments, remembering her own normal childhood, she would think with compunction: “It ain’t right. Young ’uns ought to have some fun. Seems like it’s makin’ him too old for his age.” She never spoke of these feelings, however. There were no expressions of tenderness in the Wade household. She was doing her best by her children and they knew it. Even Nellie, child that she was, understood the grimness of the battle before them.

      They were able to thresh enough wheat to repay their debt of six hundred bushels and keep an additional three hundred of seed for the following year. The remaining seven hundred and fifty they sold at twenty-five cents a bushel by hauling them to Fort Scott—thirty miles distant. Each trip meant ten dollars, but to the Wades, to whom this one hundred and eighty-seven dollars—the first actual money they had seen in over a year—was a fortune, these journeys were rides of triumph, fugitive flashes of glory in the long, gray struggle.

      That Fall they paid the first installment of two hundred dollars on their land and Martin persuaded his mother to give and Robinson to take a chattel on their two horses, old Brindle, her calf and the pigs, that other much-needed implements might be bought. Mrs. Wade toiled early and late, doing part of the chores and double her share of the Spring plowing that Martin, as well as Nellie, could attend school in Fallon.

      “I don’t care about goin’,” he had protested squirmingly.

      But on this matter his mother was without compromise. “Don’t say that,” she had commanded, her voice shaken and her eyes bright with the intensity of her emotion; “you’re goin’ to get an education.”

      And Martin, surprised and embarrassed by his mother’s unusual exhibition of feeling, had answered, roughly: “Aw, well, all right then. Don’t take on. I didn’t say I wouldn’t, did I?”

      He was twenty-three and Nellie sixteen when, worn out and broken down before her time, her resistance completely undermined, Mrs. Wade died suddenly of pneumonia. Within the year Nellie married Bert Mall, Peter’s eldest son, and Martin, at once, bought out her half interest in the farm, stock and implements, giving a first mortgage to Robinson in order to pay cash.

      “I’m making it thirty dollars an acre,” he explained.

      “That’s fair,” conceded the banker, “though the time will come when it will be cheap at a hundred and a half. There’s coal under all this county, millions of dollars’ worth waiting to be mined.”

      “Maybe,” assented Martin, laconically.

      As he sat in the dingy, little backroom of the bank, while Robinson’s pen scratched busily drawing up the papers, he was conscious of an odd thrill. The land—it was all his own! But with this thrill welled a wave of resentment over what he considered a preposterous imposition. Who had made the land into a farm? What had Nellie ever put into it that it should be half hers? His mother—now, that was different. She and he had toiled side by side like real partners; her efforts had been real and unstinted. If he were buying her out, for instance—but Nellie! Well, that was the way, he noticed, with many women—doing little and demanding much. He didn’t care for them; not he. From the day Nellie left, Martin managed alone in the shack, “baching it,” and putting his whole heart and soul into the development of his quarter-section.

      Chapter II

      Out Of The Dust

      At thirty-four, Martin was still unmarried, and though he had not travelled far on that strange road to affluence which for some seems a macadamized boulevard, but for so many, like himself, a rough cow-path, he had done better than the average farmer of Fallon County. To be sure, this was nothing over which to gloat. A man who received forty cents a bushel for wheat was satisfied; corn sold at twenty-eight cents, and the hogs it fattened in proportion. But his hundred and sixty acres were clear from debt, four thousand dollars were on deposit drawing three per cent in The First State Bank—the old Bank of Fallon, now incorporated with Robinson as its president. In the pasture, fourteen sows with their seventy-five spring pigs rooted beside the sleek herd of steers fattening for market; the granary bulged with corn; two hundred bushels of seed wheat were ready for sowing; his machinery was in excellent condition; his four Percheron mares brought him, each, a fine mule colt once a year; and the well never went dry, even in August. Martin was—if one discounted the harshness of the life, the dirt, the endless duties and the ever-pressing chores—a Kansas plutocrat.

      One fiery July day, David Robinson drew up before Martin’s shack. The little old box-house was still unpainted without and unpapered within. Two chairs, a home-made table with a Kansas City Star as a cloth, a sheetless bed, a rough cupboard, a stove and floors carpeted with accumulations of untidiness completed the furnishings.

      “Chris-to-pher Columbus!” exploded Robinson, “why don’t you fix yourself up a bit, Martin? The Lord knows you’re going to be able to afford it. What you need is a wife—someone to look after you.” And as Martin, observing him calmly, made no response, he added, “I suppose you know what I want. You’ve been watching for this day, eh, Martin? All Fallon County’s sitting on its haunches—waiting.”

      “Oh, I haven’t been worrying. A fellow situated like me, with a hundred and sixty right in the way of a coal company, can afford to be independent.”

      “You understand our procedure, Martin,” Robinson continued. “We are frank and aboveboard. We set the price, and if you can’t see your way clear to take it there are no hard feelings. We simply call it off—for good.” Wade knew how true this was. When the mining first began, several rebels toward the East had tried profitlessly to buck this irrefragable game and had found they had battered their unyielding heads against an equally unyielding stone wall. These men had demanded more and Robinson’s company, true to its threat, had urbanely gone around their farms, travelled on and left them behind, their coal untouched and certain to so remain. Such inelastic lessons, given time to soak in, were sobering.

      “Now,” said Robinson, in his amiable matter-of-fact manner, “as I happen to know the history of this quarter, backwards and forwards, we can do up this deal in short order. You sign this contract, which is exactly like all the others we use, and I’ll hand over your check. We get the bottom; you keep the top; I give you the sixteen thousand, and the thing is done.”

      “Well, Martin,” he added, genially, as Wade signed his name, “it’s a long day since you came in with your father to make that first loan to buy seed corn. Wouldn’t he have opened his eyes if any one had prophesied this? It’s a pity your mother couldn’t have lived to enjoy your good fortune. A fine, plucky woman, your mother. They don’t make many like her.”

      Long after Robinson’s buggy was out of sight, Martin stood in his doorway and stared at the five handsome figures, spelled out the even more convincing words and admired the excellent reproduction of The First State Bank.

      “This is a whole lot of money,” his thoughts ran. “I’m rich. All this land still mine—practically as much mine as ever—all this stock and twenty thousand dollars in money—in cash. It’s a fact. I, Martin Wade, am rich.”

      He remembered how he had exulted, how jubilant, even intoxicated, he had felt when he had received the ten dollars for the first load of wheat he had hauled to Fort Scott. Now, with a check for sixteen thousand—sixteen thousand dollars!—in his hand, he stood dumbly, curiously unmoved.

      Slowly, the first bitter months on this land, little Benny’s death from lack of nourishment, his father’s desperate efforts to establish his family, the years of his mother’s slow crucifixion, his own long struggle—all floated before him in a fog of reverie. Years of deprivation, of bending toil

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