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CRINKLE CREEK STAGE.
DAVE WILLIS, Pro.
He was in the land of gold! It was like a chapter from a story by Bret Harte. He dressed himself hurriedly, and went down and out into the cool, keen dawn, eager to catch a glimpse of the great peak whose name had been in his ear since a child, as the symbol of the Rocky Mountains.
There it soared, dull purple, splotched with dark green, and rising to white at its shoulders, and radiant with light on its crown. In such impa.s.sible grandeur, it must have loomed upon the eyes of the first little caravan trailing its way across the plains to the mysterious West.
He spent the day doing little else but gaze at the mountains and study the town.
It was also much more stupendous than he had imagined, and doubts of his ability to fit with all this splendor came to him with great force. He remembered the smooth, green swells and fertile fields he had left behind, and the memory brought a touch of homesickness.
After supper that evening he confided to the landlord his plans for finding a foreman's position on a stock farm.
"Well, I dunno. There are such places, but they're always snapped up 'fore you can say Jack Robinson."
"Well, I'm going to give it a good try," the young fellow said bravely.
"That's right. If I was you, I'd go out and see some of these real-estate fellers; they most always know what's going on."
"That's a good idea; much obliged. I'll tackle 'em to-morrow," said Arthur, and he went off to bed, feeling victory almost a tame bird in his hands.
The next forenoon he made his first attempt. He had determined on his speech, and he went into the first office with his song on his lips.
"I'm looking for a place on a dairy farm; I've had five years' practical experience, and am a graduate of the ---- Agricultural College. I'm after the position of bookkeeper and foreman."
The man looked at him gravely.
"You're aiming pretty high, young feller, for this country. There are plenty of chances to work, punching cattle, but I don't think chances are good for a foreman's place." He was a kindly man, and repented when he saw how the young man's face fell. "However, I'll give you some names of people to see."
On the whole, this was not so depressing, Arthur thought.
The next man made a mistake and took him for an investor. He rose with great cordiality.
"Ah, good morning, sir--good morning! Have a chair. Just in? Do you feel the draft there? Oh, all right!" Then he settled himself in his swivel chair and beamed his warmest. "Well, what do you think of our charming town?"
Arthur had not the heart to undeceive him, and so, saturated in agony sweat, crawled out at last, and went timidly on to the third man, who was kindly and interested in a way, and gave him the names of some ranchers likely to hire a hand. Some days pa.s.sed in this sort of search and resulted in nothing materially valuable, but a strong quality came out in his nature. Defeat seemed to put a grim sort of resolution into his soul.
Following faint clews, Ramsey made long walks into the country, toiling from ranch to ranch over the dun-colored, lonely hills, dogged, persistent, with lips set grimly.
He was returning late one afternoon from one of these fruitless journeys. It was one of those strange days that come in all seasons at that alt.i.tude. The air was full of suspended mist--it did not rain, the road was almost dry under foot, and yet this all-pervasive moisture seemed soaking everything. It was, in fact, a cloud, for this whole land was a mountain top.
The road wound among shapeless b.u.t.tes of red soil, the plain was clothed on its levels with a short, dry gra.s.s, and on the side of the b.u.t.tes were scattering, scraggy cedars, looking at a distance like droves of cattle.
He sat down upon a little hummock to rest, for his feet ached with the long stretches of hilly road. The larks cried to him out of the mist, with their piercing sweet notes, cheerful and undaunted ever. There was a sudden lighting up of the day, as if the lark's song had shot the mist with silver light.
As he rose and started on with painful slowness, he heard the sound of horses' hoofs behind him, and a man in a yellow cart came swiftly out of the gray obscurity.
Arthur stepped aside to let him pa.s.s, but he could not help limping a little more markedly as the man looked at him. The man seemed to understand.
"Will you ride?" he asked.
Arthur glanced up at him and nodded without speaking. The stranger was a fine-looking man, with a military cut of beard, getting gray. His face was ruddy and smiling.
"Thank you. I am rather tired," Arthur said, as he settled into the seat. "I guess I'll have to own up, I'm about played out."
"I thought you looked foot-sore. I'm enough of a Western man to feel mean when I pa.s.s a man on the road. A footman can get very tired on these stretches of ours."
"I've tramped about forty miles to-day, I guess. I'm trying to find some work to do," he added, in desperate confidence.
"Is that so? What kind of work?"
"Well, I wanted to get a place as foreman on a ranch."
"I'm afraid that's too much to expect."
Arthur sighed.
"Yes, I suppose it is. If I'd known as much two weeks ago as I do now, I wouldn't be here."
"Oh, don't get discouraged; there's plenty of work to do. I can give you something to do on my place."
"Well, I've come to the conclusion that there is nothing here for me but the place of a common hand, so if you can give me anything----"
"Oh, yes, I can give you something to do in my garden. Perhaps something better will open up later. Where are you staying?" he asked, as they neared town.
Arthur told him, and the man drove him down to his hotel.
"I'd like to have you call at my office to-morrow morning; my partner does most of the hiring. I've been living in Denver. Here's my card."
After he had driven away, the listening landlord broke forth:
"You're in luck, Cap. If you get a place with Major Thayer you're fixed."
"Who is he, anyhow?"
"Who is he? Why, he owns all the land up the creek, and banks all over Colorado."
"Is that so?"
Arthur was delighted. Of course, it was only a common hand's place, but here was the vista he had looked for--here was the chance.
He stretched his legs under the table in huge content as he ate his supper. His youthful imagination had seized upon this slender wire of promise and was swiftly making it a hoop of diamonds.
II.
When he entered the office next day, however, the Major merely nodded to him over the railing and said:
"Good morning. Take a seat, please."