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The Octopus : A Story of California
The Octopus : A Story of Californiaполная версия

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The Octopus : A Story of California

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“Harran,” he said, when the two had sat down on either side of one of the small tables, “you’ve got to make up your mind one way or another pretty soon. What are you going to do? Are you going to stand by and see the rest of the Committee spending money by the bucketful in this thing and keep your hands in your pockets? If we win, you’ll benefit just as much as the rest of us. I suppose you’ve got some money of your own—you have, haven’t you? You are your father’s manager, aren’t you?”

Disconcerted at Annixter’s directness, Harran stammered an affirmative, adding:

“It’s hard to know just what to do. It’s a mean position for me, Buck. I want to help you others, but I do want to play fair. I don’t know how to play any other way. I should like to have a line from the Governor as to how to act, but there’s no getting a word out of him these days. He seems to want to let me decide for myself.”

“Well, look here,” put in Annixter. “Suppose you keep out of the thing till it’s all over, and then share and share alike with the Committee on campaign expenses.”

Harran fell thoughtful, his hands in his pockets, frowning moodily at the toe of his boot. There was a silence. Then:

“I don’t like to go it blind,” he hazarded. “I’m sort of sharing the responsibility of what you do, then. I’m a silent partner. And, then—I don’t want to have any difficulties with the Governor. We’ve always got along well together. He wouldn’t like it, you know, if I did anything like that.” “Say,” exclaimed Annixter abruptly, “if the Governor says he will keep his hands off, and that you can do as you please, will you come in? For God’s sake, let us ranchers act together for once. Let’s stand in with each other in ONE fight.”

Without knowing it, Annixter had touched the right spring.

“I don’t know but what you’re right,” Harran murmured vaguely. His sense of discouragement, that feeling of what’s-the-use, was never more oppressive. All fair means had been tried. The wheat grower was at last with his back to the wall. If he chose his own means of fighting, the responsibility must rest upon his enemies, not on himself.

“It’s the only way to accomplish anything,” he continued, “standing in with each other… well,… go ahead and see what you can do. If the Governor is willing, I’ll come in for my share of the campaign fund.”

“That’s some sense,” exclaimed Annixter, shaking him by the hand. “Half the fight is over already. We’ve got Disbrow you know; and the next thing is to get hold of some of those rotten San Francisco bosses. Osterman will–” But Harran interrupted him, making a quick gesture with his hand.

“Don’t tell me about it,” he said. “I don’t want to know what you and Osterman are going to do. If I did, I shouldn’t come in.”

Yet, for all this, before they said good-bye Annixter had obtained Harran’s promise that he would attend the next meeting of the Committee, when Osterman should return from Los Angeles and make his report. Harran went on toward Los Muertos. Annixter mounted and rode into Bonneville.

Bonneville was very lively at all times. It was a little city of some twenty or thirty thousand inhabitants, where, as yet, the city hall, the high school building, and the opera house were objects of civic pride. It was well governed, beautifully clean, full of the energy and strenuous young life of a new city. An air of the briskest activity pervaded its streets and sidewalks. The business portion of the town, centring about Main Street, was always crowded. Annixter, arriving at the Post Office, found himself involved in a scene of swiftly shifting sights and sounds. Saddle horses, farm wagons—the inevitable Studebakers—buggies grey with the dust of country roads, buckboards with squashes and grocery packages stowed under the seat, two-wheeled sulkies and training carts, were hitched to the gnawed railings and zinc-sheathed telegraph poles along the curb. Here and there, on the edge of the sidewalk, were bicycles, wedged into bicycle racks painted with cigar advertisements. Upon the asphalt sidewalk itself, soft and sticky with the morning’s heat, was a continuous movement. Men with large stomachs, wearing linen coats but no vests, laboured ponderously up and down. Girls in lawn skirts, shirt waists, and garden hats, went to and fro, invariably in couples, coming in and out of the drug store, the grocery store, and haberdasher’s, or lingering in front of the Post Office, which was on a corner under the I.O.O.F. hall. Young men, in shirt sleeves, with brown, wicker cuff-protectors over their forearms, and pencils behind their ears, bustled in front of the grocery store, anxious and preoccupied. A very old man, a Mexican, in ragged white trousers and bare feet, sat on a horse-block in front of the barber shop, holding a horse by a rope around its neck. A Chinaman went by, teetering under the weight of his market baskets slung on a pole across his shoulders. In the neighbourhood of the hotel, the Yosemite House, travelling salesmen, drummers for jewelry firms of San Francisco, commercial agents, insurance men, well-dressed, metropolitan, debonair, stood about cracking jokes, or hurried in and out of the flapping white doors of the Yosemite barroom. The Yosemite ‘bus and City ‘bus passed up the street, on the way from the morning train, each with its two or three passengers. A very narrow wagon, belonging to the Cole & Colemore Harvester Works, went by, loaded with long strips of iron that made a horrible din as they jarred over the unevenness of the pavement. The electric car line, the city’s boast, did a brisk business, its cars whirring from end to end of the street, with a jangling of bells and a moaning plaint of gearing. On the stone bulkheads of the grass plat around the new City Hall, the usual loafers sat, chewing tobacco, swapping stories. In the park were the inevitable array of nursemaids, skylarking couples, and ragged little boys. A single policeman, in grey coat and helmet, friend and acquaintance of every man and woman in the town, stood by the park entrance, leaning an elbow on the fence post, twirling his club.

But in the centre of the best business block of the street was a three-story building of rough brown stone, set off with plate glass windows and gold-lettered signs. One of these latter read, “Pacific and Southwestern Railroad, Freight and Passenger Office,” while another much smaller, beneath the windows of the second story bore the inscription, “P. and S. W. Land Office.”

Annixter hitched his horse to the iron post in front of this building, and tramped up to the second floor, letting himself into an office where a couple of clerks and bookkeepers sat at work behind a high wire screen. One of these latter recognised him and came forward.

“Hello,” said Annixter abruptly, scowling the while. “Is your boss in? Is Ruggles in?”

The bookkeeper led Annixter to the private office in an adjoining room, ushering him through a door, on the frosted glass of which was painted the name, “Cyrus Blakelee Ruggles.” Inside, a man in a frock coat, shoestring necktie, and Stetson hat, sat writing at a roller-top desk. Over this desk was a vast map of the railroad holdings in the country about Bonneville and Guadalajara, the alternate sections belonging to the Corporation accurately plotted. Ruggles was cordial in his welcome of Annixter. He had a way of fiddling with his pencil continually while he talked, scribbling vague lines and fragments of words and names on stray bits of paper, and no sooner had Annixter sat down than he had begun to write, in full-bellied script, ANN ANN all over his blotting pad.

“I want to see about those lands of mine—I mean of yours—of the railroad’s,” Annixter commenced at once. “I want to know when I can buy. I’m sick of fooling along like this.”

“Well, Mr. Annixter,” observed Ruggles, writing a great L before the ANN, and finishing it off with a flourishing D. “The lands”—he crossed out one of the N’s and noted the effect with a hasty glance—“the lands are practically yours. You have an option on them indefinitely, and, as it is, you don’t have to pay the taxes.”

“Rot your option! I want to own them,” Annixter declared. “What have you people got to gain by putting off selling them to us. Here this thing has dragged along for over eight years. When I came in on Quien Sabe, the understanding was that the lands—your alternate sections—were to be conveyed to me within a few months.”

“The land had not been patented to us then,” answered Ruggles.

“Well, it has been now, I guess,” retorted Annixter.

“I’m sure I couldn’t tell you, Mr. Annixter.”

Annixter crossed his legs weariedly.

“Oh, what’s the good of lying, Ruggles? You know better than to talk that way to me.”

Ruggles’s face flushed on the instant, but he checked his answer and laughed instead.

“Oh, if you know so much about it—” he observed.

“Well, when are you going to sell to me?”

“I’m only acting for the General Office, Mr. Annixter,” returned Ruggles. “Whenever the Directors are ready to take that matter up, I’ll be only too glad to put it through for you.”

“As if you didn’t know. Look here, you’re not talking to old Broderson. Wake up, Ruggles. What’s all this talk in Genslinger’s rag about the grading of the value of our lands this winter and an advance in the price?”

Ruggles spread out his hands with a deprecatory gesture.

“I don’t own the ‘Mercury,’” he said.

“Well, your company does.”

“If it does, I don’t know anything about it.”

“Oh, rot! As if you and Genslinger and S. Behrman didn’t run the whole show down here. Come on, let’s have it, Ruggles. What does S. Behrman pay Genslinger for inserting that three-inch ad. of the P. and S. W. in his paper? Ten thousand a year, hey?”

“Oh, why not a hundred thousand and be done with it?” returned the other, willing to take it as a joke.

Instead of replying, Annixter drew his check-book from his inside pocket.

“Let me take that fountain pen of yours,” he said. Holding the book on his knee he wrote out a check, tore it carefully from the stub, and laid it on the desk in front of Ruggles.

“What’s this?” asked Ruggles.

“Three-fourths payment for the sections of railroad land included in my ranch, based on a valuation of two dollars and a half per acre. You can have the balance in sixty-day notes.”

Ruggles shook his head, drawing hastily back from the check as though it carried contamination.

“I can’t touch it,” he declared. “I’ve no authority to sell to you yet.”

“I don’t understand you people,” exclaimed Annixter. “I offered to buy of you the same way four years ago and you sang the same song. Why, it isn’t business. You lose the interest on your money. Seven per cent. of that capital for four years—you can figure it out. It’s big money.”

“Well, then, I don’t see why you’re so keen on parting with it. You can get seven per cent. the same as us.”

“I want to own my own land,” returned Annixter. “I want to feel that every lump of dirt inside my fence is my personal property. Why, the very house I live in now—the ranch house—stands on railroad ground.”

“But, you’ve an option”

“I tell you I don’t want your cursed option. I want ownership; and it’s the same with Magnus Derrick and old Broderson and Osterman and all the ranchers of the county. We want to own our land, want to feel we can do as we blame please with it. Suppose I should want to sell Quien Sabe. I can’t sell it as a whole till I’ve bought of you. I can’t give anybody a clear title. The land has doubled in value ten times over again since I came in on it and improved it. It’s worth easily twenty an acre now. But I can’t take advantage of that rise in value so long as you won’t sell, so long as I don’t own it. You’re blocking me.”

“But, according to you, the railroad can’t take advantage of the rise in any case. According to you, you can sell for twenty dollars, but we can only get two and a half.”

“Who made it worth twenty?” cried Annixter. “I’ve improved it up to that figure. Genslinger seems to have that idea in his nut, too. Do you people think you can hold that land, untaxed, for speculative purposes until it goes up to thirty dollars and then sell out to some one else—sell it over our heads? You and Genslinger weren’t in office when those contracts were drawn. You ask your boss, you ask S. Behrman, he knows. The General Office is pledged to sell to us in preference to any one else, for two and a half.”

“Well,” observed Ruggles decidedly, tapping the end of his pencil on his desk and leaning forward to emphasise his words, “we’re not selling NOW. That’s said and signed, Mr. Annixter.”

“Why not? Come, spit it out. What’s the bunco game this time?”

“Because we’re not ready. Here’s your check.”

“You won’t take it?”

“No.”

“I’ll make it a cash payment, money down—the whole of it—payable to Cyrus Blakelee Ruggles, for the P. and S. W.”

“No.”

“Third and last time.”

“No.”

“Oh, go to the devil!”

“I don’t like your tone, Mr. Annixter,” returned Ruggles, flushing angrily. “I don’t give a curse whether you like it or not,” retorted Annixter, rising and thrusting the check into his pocket, “but never you mind, Mr. Ruggles, you and S. Behrman and Genslinger and Shelgrim and the whole gang of thieves of you—you’ll wake this State of California up some of these days by going just one little bit too far, and there’ll be an election of Railroad Commissioners of, by, and for the people, that’ll get a twist of you, my bunco-steering friend—you and your backers and cappers and swindlers and thimble-riggers, and smash you, lock, stock, and barrel. That’s my tip to you and be damned to you, Mr. Cyrus Blackleg Ruggles.”

Annixter stormed out of the room, slamming the door behind him, and Ruggles, trembling with anger, turned to his desk and to the blotting pad written all over with the words LANDS, TWENTY DOLLARS, TWO AND A HALF, OPTION, and, over and over again, with great swelling curves and flourishes, RAILROAD, RAILROAD, RAILROAD.

But as Annixter passed into the outside office, on the other side of the wire partition he noted the figure of a man at the counter in conversation with one of the clerks. There was something familiar to Annixter’s eye about the man’s heavy built frame, his great shoulders and massive back, and as he spoke to the clerk in a tremendous, rumbling voice, Annixter promptly recognised Dyke.

There was a meeting. Annixter liked Dyke, as did every one else in and about Bonneville. He paused now to shake hands with the discharged engineer and to ask about his little daughter, Sidney, to whom he knew Dyke was devotedly attached.

“Smartest little tad in Tulare County,” asserted Dyke. “She’s getting prettier every day, Mr. Annixter. THERE’S a little tad that was just born to be a lady. Can recite the whole of ‘Snow Bound’ without ever stopping. You don’t believe that, maybe, hey? Well, it’s true. She’ll be just old enough to enter the Seminary up at Marysville next winter, and if my hop business pays two per cent. on the investment, there’s where she’s going to go.”

“How’s it coming on?” inquired Annixter.

“The hop ranch? Prime. I’ve about got the land in shape, and I’ve engaged a foreman who knows all about hops. I’ve been in luck. Everybody will go into the business next year when they see hops go to a dollar, and they’ll overstock the market and bust the price. But I’m going to get the cream of it now. I say two per cent. Why, Lord love you, it will pay a good deal more than that. It’s got to. It’s cost more than I figured to start the thing, so, perhaps, I may have to borrow somewheres; but then on such a sure game as this—and I do want to make something out of that little tad of mine.”

“Through here?” inquired Annixter, making ready to move off.

“In just a minute,” answered Dyke. “Wait for me and I’ll walk down the street with you.”

Annixter grumbled that he was in a hurry, but waited, nevertheless, while Dyke again approached the clerk.

“I shall want some empty cars of you people this fall,” he explained. “I’m a hop-raiser now, and I just want to make sure what your rates on hops are. I’ve been told, but I want to make sure. Savvy?” There was a long delay while the clerk consulted the tariff schedules, and Annixter fretted impatiently. Dyke, growing uneasy, leaned heavily on his elbows, watching the clerk anxiously. If the tariff was exorbitant, he saw his plans brought to naught, his money jeopardised, the little tad, Sidney, deprived of her education. He began to blame himself that he had not long before determined definitely what the railroad would charge for moving his hops. He told himself he was not much of a business man; that he managed carelessly.

“Two cents,” suddenly announced the clerk with a certain surly indifference.

“Two cents a pound?”

“Yes, two cents a pound—that’s in car-load lots, of course. I won’t give you that rate on smaller consignments.”

“Yes, car-load lots, of course… two cents. Well, all right.”

He turned away with a great sigh of relief.

“He sure did have me scared for a minute,” he said to Annixter, as the two went down to the street, “fiddling and fussing so long. Two cents is all right, though. Seems fair to me. That fiddling of his was all put on. I know ‘em, these railroad heelers. He knew I was a discharged employee first off, and he played the game just to make me seem small because I had to ask favours of him. I don’t suppose the General Office tips its slavees off to act like swine, but there’s the feeling through the whole herd of them. ‘Ye got to come to us. We let ye live only so long as we choose, and what are ye going to do about it? If ye don’t like it, git out.’”

Annixter and the engineer descended to the street and had a drink at the Yosemite bar, and Annixter went into the General Store while Dyke bought a little pair of red slippers for Sidney. Before the salesman had wrapped them up, Dyke slipped a dime into the toe of each with a wink at Annixter.

“Let the little tad find ‘em there,” he said behind his hand in a hoarse whisper. “That’ll be one on Sid.”

“Where to now?” demanded Annixter as they regained the street. “I’m going down to the Post Office and then pull out for the ranch. Going my way?”

Dyke hesitated in some confusion, tugging at the ends of his fine blonde beard.

“No, no. I guess I’ll leave you here. I’ve got—got other things to do up the street. So long.”

The two separated, and Annixter hurried through the crowd to the Post Office, but the mail that had come in on that morning’s train was unusually heavy. It was nearly half an hour before it was distributed. Naturally enough, Annixter placed all the blame of the delay upon the railroad, and delivered himself of some pointed remarks in the midst of the waiting crowd. He was irritated to the last degree when he finally emerged upon the sidewalk again, cramming his mail into his pockets. One cause of his bad temper was the fact that in the bundle of Quien Sabe letters was one to Hilma Tree in a man’s handwriting.

“Huh!” Annixter had growled to himself, “that pip Delaney. Seems now that I’m to act as go-between for ‘em. Well, maybe that feemale girl gets this letter, and then, again, maybe she don’t.”

But suddenly his attention was diverted. Directly opposite the Post Office, upon the corner of the street, stood quite the best business building of which Bonneville could boast. It was built of Colusa granite, very solid, ornate, imposing. Upon the heavy plate of the window of its main floor, in gold and red letters, one read the words: “Loan and Savings Bank of Tulare County.” It was of this bank that S. Behrman was president. At the street entrance of the building was a curved sign of polished brass, fixed upon the angle of the masonry; this sign bore the name, “S. Behrman,” and under it in smaller letters were the words, “Real Estate, Mortgages.”

As Annixter’s glance fell upon this building, he was surprised to see Dyke standing upon the curb in front of it, apparently reading from a newspaper that he held in his hand. But Annixter promptly discovered that he was not reading at all. From time to time the former engineer shot a swift glance out of the corner of his eye up and down the street. Annixter jumped at a conclusion. An idea suddenly occurred to him. Dyke was watching to see if he was observed—was waiting an opportunity when no one who knew him should be in sight. Annixter stepped back a little, getting a telegraph pole somewhat between him and the other. Very interested, he watched what was going on. Pretty soon Dyke thrust the paper into his pocket and sauntered slowly to the windows of a stationery store, next the street entrance of S. Behrman’s offices. For a few seconds he stood there, his back turned, seemingly absorbed in the display, but eyeing the street narrowly nevertheless; then he turned around, gave a last look about and stepped swiftly into the doorway by the great brass sign. He disappeared. Annixter came from behind the telegraph pole with a flush of actual shame upon his face. There had been something so slinking, so mean, in the movements and manner of this great, burly honest fellow of an engineer, that he could not help but feel ashamed for him. Circumstances were such that a simple business transaction was to Dyke almost culpable, a degradation, a thing to be concealed.

“Borrowing money of S. Behrman,” commented Annixter, “mortgaging your little homestead to the railroad, putting your neck in the halter. Poor fool! The pity of it. Good Lord, your hops must pay you big, now, old man.”

Annixter lunched at the Yosemite Hotel, and then later on, toward the middle of the afternoon, rode out of the town at a canter by the way of the Upper Road that paralleled the railroad tracks and that ran diametrically straight between Bonneville and Guadalajara. About half-way between the two places he overtook Father Sarria trudging back to San Juan, his long cassock powdered with dust. He had a wicker crate in one hand, and in the other, in a small square valise, the materials for the Holy Sacrament. Since early morning the priest had covered nearly fifteen miles on foot, in order to administer Extreme Unction to a moribund good-for-nothing, a greaser, half Indian, half Portuguese, who lived in a remote corner of Osterman’s stock range, at the head of a canon there. But he had returned by way of Bonneville to get a crate that had come for him from San Diego. He had been notified of its arrival the day before.

Annixter pulled up and passed the time of day with the priest.

“I don’t often get up your way,” he said, slowing down his horse to accommodate Sarria’s deliberate plodding. Sarria wiped the perspiration from his smooth, shiny face.

“You? Well, with you it is different,” he answered. “But there are a great many Catholics in the county—some on your ranch. And so few come to the Mission. At High Mass on Sundays, there are a few—Mexicans and Spaniards from Guadalajara mostly; but weekdays, for matins, vespers, and the like, I often say the offices to an empty church—‘the voice of one crying in the wilderness.’ You Americans are not good churchmen. Sundays you sleep—you read the newspapers.”

“Well, there’s Vanamee,” observed Annixter. “I suppose he’s there early and late.”

Sarria made a sharp movement of interest.

“Ah, Vanamee—a strange lad; a wonderful character, for all that. If there were only more like him. I am troubled about him. You know I am a very owl at night. I come and go about the Mission at all hours. Within the week, three times I have seen Vanamee in the little garden by the Mission, and at the dead of night. He had come without asking for me. He did not see me. It was strange. Once, when I had got up at dawn to ring for early matins, I saw him stealing away out of the garden. He must have been there all the night. He is acting queerly. He is pale; his cheeks are more sunken than ever. There is something wrong with him. I can’t make it out. It is a mystery. Suppose you ask him?”

“Not I. I’ve enough to bother myself about. Vanamee is crazy in the head. Some morning he will turn up missing again, and drop out of sight for another three years. Best let him alone, Sarria. He’s a crank. How is that greaser of yours up on Osterman’s stock range?”

“Ah, the poor fellow—the poor fellow,” returned the other, the tears coming to his eyes. “He died this morning—as you might say, in my arms, painfully, but in the faith, in the faith. A good fellow.”

“A lazy, cattle-stealing, knife-in-his-boot Dago.”

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