<SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER VII </h3>
<h4>
THE WORK AT THE MILLS
</h4>
<p>It was sundown. The evening shadows, long
drawn out, were rapidly merging into the purple
shades of twilight. The hush of night was stealing
upon the valley.</p>
<p>There was one voice alone, one discordant note,
to jar upon the peace of Nature's repose. It was
the voice of Dave's mills, a voice that was never
silent. The village, with all its bustling life, its
noisy boarding-houses, its well-filled drinking
booths, its roystering lumber-jacks released from
their day's toil, was powerless to disturb that repose.
But the harsh voice of the driving machinery rose
dominant above all other sounds. Repose was impossible,
even for Nature, where the restless spirit
of Dave's enterprise prevailed.</p>
<p>The vast wooden structures of the mills, acres of
them, stood like some devouring growth at the very
core of Nature's fair body. It almost seemed like a
living organism feeding upon all the best she had to
yield. Day and night the saws, like the gleaming
fangs of a voracious life, tore, devoured, digested,
and the song of its labors droned without ceasing.</p>
<p>Controlling, directing, ordering to the last detail,
Dave sat in his unpretentious office. Love of the
lumberman's craft ran hot in his veins. He had
been born and bred to it. He had passed through
its every phase. He was a sawyer whose name
was historical in the forests of Oregon. As a cant-hook
man he had few equals. As foreman he could
extract more work from these simple woodsman
giants than could those he employed in a similar
capacity.</p>
<p>In work he was inevitable. His men knew that
when he demanded they must yield. In this direction
he displayed no sympathy, no gentleness. He
knew the disposition of the lumber-jack. These
woodsmen rate their employer by his driving
power. They understand and expect to be ruled by
a stern discipline, and if this treatment is not forthcoming,
their employer may just as well abandon
his enterprise for all the work they will yield him.</p>
<p>But though this was Dave in his business, it was
the result of his tremendous force of character
rather than the nature of the man. If he drove, it
was honestly, legitimately. He paid for the best a
man could give him, and he saw that he got it.
Sickness was sure of ready sympathy, not outspoken,
but practical. He was much like the prairie
man with his horse. His beast is cared for far
better than its master cares for himself, but it must
work, and work enthusiastically to the last ounce of
its power. Fail, and the horse must go. So it
was with Dave. The man who failed him would
receive his "time" instantly. There was no question,
no excuse. And every lumber-jack knew this
and gladly entered his service.</p>
<p>Dave was closeted with his foreman, Joel Dawson,
receiving the day's report.</p>
<p>"The tally's eighty thousand," Dawson was saying.</p>
<p>Dave looked up from his books. His keen,
humorous eyes surveyed the man's squat figure.</p>
<p>"Not enough," he said.</p>
<p>"She's pressing hard now," came the man's
rejoinder, almost defensively.</p>
<p>"She's got to do twenty thousand more,"
retorted Dave finally.</p>
<p>"Then y'll have to give her more saw room."</p>
<p>"We'll see to it. Meanwhile shove her. How
are the logs running? Is Mason keeping the
length?"</p>
<p>"Guess he cayn't do better. We ain't handled
nothin' under eighty foot."</p>
<p>"Good. They're driving down the river fast?"</p>
<p>"The boom's full, an' we're workin' 'em good an'
plenty." The man paused. "'Bout more saw
beds an' rollers," he went on a moment later.
"Ther' ain't an inch o' space, boss. We'll hev to
build."</p>
<p>Dave shook his head and faced round from his
desk.</p>
<p>"There's no time. You'll have to take out the
gang saws and replace them for log trimming."</p>
<p>Dawson spat into the spittoon. He eyed the
ugly, powerful young features of his boss speculatively
while he made a swift mental calculation.</p>
<p>"That'll mebbe give us eight thousand more.
'Tain't enough, I guess," he said emphatically.
"Say, there's that mill up river. Her as belongs
to Jim Truscott. If we had her runnin' I 'lows
we'd handle twenty-five thousand on a day and
night shift. Givin' us fifty all told."</p>
<p>Dave's eyes lit.</p>
<p>"I've thought of that," he said. "That'll put us
up with a small margin. I'll see what can be
done. How are the new boys making? I've had
a good report from Mason up on No. 1 camp.
He's transferred his older hands to new camps, and
has the new men with him. He's started to cut on
Section 80. His estimate is ten million in the
stump on that cut; all big stuff. He's running a
big saw-gang up there. The roads were easy making
and good for travoying, and most of the timber
is within half a mile of the river. We don't need
to worry about the 'drive.' He's got the stuff
plenty, and all the 'hands' he needs. It's the mill
right here that's worrying."</p>
<p>Dawson took a fresh chew.</p>
<p>"Yes, it's the mill, I guess," he said slowly.
"That an' this yer strike. We're goin' to feel it—the
strike, I mean. The engineers and firemen are
going 'out,' I hear, sure."</p>
<p>"That doesn't hit us," said Dave sharply. But
there was a keen look of inquiry in his eyes.</p>
<p>"Don't it?" Dawson raised his shaggy eyebrows.</p>
<p>"Our stuff is merely to be placed on board
here. The government will see to its transport."</p>
<p>The foreman shook his head.</p>
<p>"What o' them firemen an' engineers in the
mill? Say, they're mostly union men, an'——"</p>
<p>"I see." Dave became thoughtful.</p>
<p>"Guess that ain't the only trouble neither,"
Dawson went on, warming. "Strikes is hell-fire
anyways. Ther' ain't no stoppin' 'em when they
git good an' goin'. Ther's folk who'd hate work
wuss'n pizin when others, of a different craft, are
buckin'. I hate strikes, anyway, an' I'll feel a sight
easier when the railroaders quits."</p>
<p>"You're alarming yourself without need," Dave
said easily, closing his books and rising from his
seat. "Guess I'll get to supper. And see you
remember I look to you to shove her. Are you
posting the 'tally'?"</p>
<p>"Sure. They're goin' up every shift."</p>
<p>A few minutes later the foreman took his departure
to hand over to Simon Odd, who ran the
mills at night. Dave watched him go. Then, instead
of going off to his supper, he sat down again.</p>
<p>Dawson's warning was not without its effect on
him, in spite of the easy manner in which he had
set it aside. If his mills were to be affected by the
strike it would be the worst disaster that could
befall—short of fire. To find himself with millions
of feet coming down the river on the drive and no
possibility of getting it cut would mean absolute
ruin. Yes, it was a nasty thought. A thought so
unpleasant that he promptly set it aside and turned
his attention to more pleasant matters.</p>
<p>One of the most pleasant that occurred to him
was the condition of things in the village. Malkern
had already begun to boom as the first result of his
sudden burst of increased work. Outside capital
was coming in for town plots, and several fresh
buildings were going up. Addlestone Chicks, the
dry-goods storekeeper, was extending his premises
to accommodate the enormous increase in his
trade. Two more saloons were being considered,
both to be built by men from Calford, and the
railroad had promised two mails a day instead of
one.</p>
<p>Dave thought of these things with the satisfaction
of a man who is steadily realizing his ambitions. It
only needed his success for prosperity to come
automatically to the village in the valley. That was
it, his success. This thought brought to his mind
again the matter of Jim Truscott's mill, and this,
again, set him thinking of Jim himself.</p>
<p>He had seen nothing of Jim since his meeting
with him on the bridge, and the memory of that
meeting was a dark shadow in his recollection.
Since that time two days had passed, two days spent
in arduous labor, when there had been no time for
more than a passing thought for anything else.
He had seen no one outside of his mills. He had
seen neither Betty nor her uncle; no one who
could tell him how matters were going with the
prodigal. He felt somehow that he had been neglectful,
he felt that he had wrongfully allowed himself
to be swamped in the vortex of the whirling
waters of his labors. He had purposely shut out
every other consideration.</p>
<p>Now his mind turned upon Betty, and he suddenly
decided to take half an hour's respite and
visit Harley-Smith's saloon. He felt that this
would be the best direction in which to seek Jim
Truscott. Five years ago it would have been different.</p>
<p>He rose from his seat and stretched his cumbersome
body. Young as he was, he felt stiff. His
tremendous effort was making itself felt. Picking
up his pipe he lit it, and as he dropped the charred
end of the match in the spittoon a knock came at the
door. It opened in answer to his call, and in the
half-light of the evening he recognized the very
man whom he had just decided to seek.</p>
<p>It was Jim Truscott who stood in the doorway
peering into the darkened room. And at last his
searching eyes rested on the enormous figure of the
lumberman. Dave was well in the shadow, and
what light came in through the window fell full upon
the newcomer's face.</p>
<p>In the brief silence he had a good look at him.
He saw that now he was clean-shaven, that his hair
had been trimmed, that his clothes were good and
belonged to the more civilized conditions of city
life. He was good-looking beyond a doubt; a face,
he thought, to catch a young girl's fancy. There
was something romantic in the dark setting of the
eyes, the keen aquiline nose, the broad forehead.
It was only the lower part of the face that he found
fault with. There was that vicious weakness about
the mouth and chin, and it set him pondering.
There were the marks of dissipation about the eyes
too, only now they were a hundredfold more pronounced.
Where before the rounded cheeks had
once so smoothly sloped away, now there were
puffings, with deep, unwholesome furrows which, in
a man of his age, had no right to be there.</p>
<p>Jim was the first to speak, and his manner was
almost defiant.</p>
<p>"Well?" he ejaculated.</p>
<p>"Well?" responded Dave; and the newly-opened
waters suddenly froze over again.</p>
<p>They measured each other, eye to eye. Both
had the memory of their meeting two days ago
keenly alive in their thought. Finally Jim broke
into a laugh that sounded harshly.</p>
<p>"After five years' absence your cordiality is overwhelming,"
he said.</p>
<p>"I seem to remember meeting you on the bridge
two days ago," retorted Dave.</p>
<p>Then he turned to his desk and lit the lamp.
The mill siren hooted out its mournful cry. Its
roar was deafening, and answered as an excuse for
the silence which remained for some moments between
the two men. When the last echo had died
out Truscott spoke again. Evidently he had availed
himself of those seconds to decide on a more conciliatory
course.</p>
<p>"That's nerve-racking," he said lightly.</p>
<p>"Yes, if your nerves aren't in the best condition,"
replied Dave. Then he indicated a chair and
both men seated themselves.</p>
<p>Truscott made himself comfortable and lit a cigar.</p>
<p>"Well, Dave," he said pleasantly, "after five years
I return here to find everybody talking of you, of
your work, of the fortune you are making, of the
prosperity of the village—which, by the way, is credited
to your efforts. You are the man of the moment
in the valley; you are it!"</p>
<p>Dave nodded.</p>
<p>"Things are doing."</p>
<p>"Doing, man! Why, it's the most wonderful
thing. I leave a little dozy village, and I come
back to a town thrilling with a magnificent prosperity,
with money in plenty for everybody, and on
every hand talk of investment, and dreams of fortunes
to be made. I'm glad I came. I'm glad I
left that benighted country of cold and empty
stomachs and returned to this veritable Tom Tiddler's
ground. I too intend to share in the prosperity
you have brought about. Dave, you are a
wonder."</p>
<p>"I thought you'd come to talk of other matters,"
said Dave quietly.</p>
<p>His words had ample effect. The enthusiasm
dropped from the other like a cloak. His face lost
its smile, and his eyes became watchful.</p>
<p>"You mean——"</p>
<p>"Betty," said Dave shortly.</p>
<p>Truscott stirred uneasily. Dave's directness was
a little disconcerting. Suddenly the latter leant
forward in his chair, and his steady eyes held his
visitor.</p>
<p>"Five years ago, Jim, you went away, and, going,
you left Betty to my care—for you. That
child has always been in my thoughts, and though
I've never had an opportunity to afford her the protection
you asked of me, it has not been my fault.
She has never once needed it. You went away to
make money for her, so that when you came back
you could marry her. I remember our meeting
two days ago, and it's not my intention to say a
thing of it. I have been so busy since then that I
have seen nobody who could tell me of either her
or you, so I know nothing of how your affairs stand.
But if you've anything to say on the matter now
I'm prepared to listen. Did you make good up
there in the Yukon?"</p>
<p>Dave's tone was the tone Truscott had always
known. It was kindly, it was strong with honesty
and purpose. He felt easier for it, and his relief
sounded in his reply.</p>
<p>"I can't complain," he said, settling himself more
comfortably in his chair.</p>
<p>"I'm glad," said Dave simply. "I was doubtful
of the experiment, but—well, I'm glad.
And——?"</p>
<p>Suddenly Jim sprang to his feet and began to
pace the room. Dave watched him. He was
reading him. He was studying the nervous movements,
and interpreting them as surely as though
their meaning were written large in the plainest lettering.
It was the same man he had known five
years ago—the same, only with a difference. He
beheld the weakness he had realized before, but
now, where there had been frank honesty in all his
movements and expressions, there was a furtive
undercurrent which suggested only too clearly the
truth of the stories told about him.</p>
<p>"Dave," he burst out at last, coming to a sudden
stand in front of him. "I've come to you about
Betty. I've come to you to tell you all the regret
I have at that meeting of ours on the bridge, and
all I said at the time. I want to tell you that I'm a
rotten fool and blackguard. That I haven't been
near Betty since I came back. I was to have gone
to tea that afternoon, and didn't do so because I
got blind drunk instead, and when her uncle came
to fetch me I told him to go to hell, and insulted
him in a dozen ways. I want to tell you that while
I was away I practically forgot Betty, I didn't care
for her any longer, that I scarcely even regarded
our engagement as serious. I feel I must tell you
this. And now it is all changed. I have seen her
and I want her. I love her madly, and—and I
have spoiled all my chances. She'll never speak
to me again. I am a fool and a crook—an utter
wrong 'un, but I want her. I must have her!"</p>
<p>The man paused breathlessly. His words carried
conviction. His manner was passion-swept
There could be no doubt as to his sincerity, or of
the truth of the momentary remorse conveyed in
his self-accusation.</p>
<p>Dave's teeth shut tight upon his pipe-stem.</p>
<p>"And you did all that?" he inquired with a
tenseness that made his voice painfully harsh.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes, I did. Dave, you can't say any
harder things to me than I've said to myself.
When I drink there's madness in my blood that
drives me where it will."</p>
<p>The other suddenly rose from his seat and
towered over him. The look on his rugged
face was one of mastery. His personality dominated
Truscott at that moment in a manner
that made him shrink before his steady, luminous
eyes.</p>
<p>"How've you earned your living?" he demanded
sharply.</p>
<p>"I'm a gambler," came Jim's uneasy reply, the
truth forced from him against his will.</p>
<p>"You're a drunkard and a crook?"</p>
<p>"I'm a fool. I told you."</p>
<p>Dave accepted the admission.</p>
<p>"Then for God's sake get out of this village, and
write and release Betty from her engagement.
You say you love her. Prove it by releasing her,
and be a man."</p>
<p>Dave's voice rang out deep with emotion. At
that moment he was thinking of Betty, and not of
the man before him. He was not there to judge
him, his only thought was of the tragedy threatening
the girl.</p>
<p>Truscott had suddenly become calm, and his
eyes had again assumed that furtive watchfulness as
he looked up into the larger man's face. He shook
his head.</p>
<p>"I can't give her up," he said obstinately, after a
pause.</p>
<p>Dave sat down again, watching the set, almost
savage expression of the other's face. The position
was difficult; he was not only dealing with this
man, but with a woman whose sense of duty and
honor was such that left him little hope of settling
the matter as he felt it should be settled. Finally
he decided to appeal again to the man's better nature.</p>
<p>"Jim," he said solemnly, "you come here and
confess yourself a crook, and, if not a drunkard, at
least a man with a bad tendency that way. You
say you love Betty, in spite of having forgotten her
while you were away. On your conscience I ask
you, can you wilfully drag this girl, who has known
only the purest, most innocent, and God-fearing
life, into the path you admit you have been, are
treading? Can you drag her down with you?
Can you in your utter selfishness take her from a
home where she is surrounded by all that can keep
a woman pure and good? I don't believe it. That
is not the Jim I used to know. Jim, take it from
me, there is only one decent course open to you,
one honest one. Leave her alone, and go from
here yourself. You have no right to her so long as
your life is what it is."</p>
<p>"But my life is going to be that no longer,"
Truscott broke in with passionate earnestness.
"Dave, help me out in this. For God's sake, do.
It will be the making of me. I have money now,
and I want to get rid of the old life. I, too, want
to be decent. I do. I swear it. Give me this
chance to straighten myself. I know your influence
with her. You can get her to excuse that
lapse. She will listen to you. My God! Dave,
you don't know how I love that girl."</p>
<p>While the lumberman listened his heart hardened.
He understood the selfishness, the weakness underlying
this man's passion. He understood more
than that, Betty was no longer the child she was
five years ago, but a handsome woman of perfect
moulding. And, truth to tell, he felt this sudden
reawakening of the man's passion was not worthy
of the name of the love he claimed for it, but rather
belonged to baser inspiration. But his own feelings
prevented his doing what he would like to have
done. He felt that he ought to kick the man out
of his office, and have him hunted out of the village.
But years ago he had given his promise of
help, and a promise was never a light thing with
him. And besides that, he realized his own love
for Betty, and could not help fearing that his judgment
was biassed by it. In the end he gave the
answer which from the first he knew he must give.</p>
<p>"If you mean that," he said coldly, "I will do
what I can for you."</p>
<p>Jim's face lit, and he held out his hand impulsively.</p>
<p>"Thanks, Dave," he cried, his whole face clearing
and lighting up as if by magic. "You're a
bully friend. Shake!"</p>
<p>But the other ignored the outstretched hand.
Somehow he felt he could no longer take it in
friendship. Truscott saw the coldness in his eyes,
and instantly drew his hand away. He moved
toward the door.</p>
<p>"Will you see her to-night?" he asked over his
shoulder.</p>
<p>"I can't say. You'll probably hear from her."</p>
<p>At the door the man turned, and Dave suddenly
recollected something.</p>
<p>"Oh, by the way," he said, still in his coldest
manner, "I'd like to buy that old mill of yours—or
lease it. I don't mind which. How much do you
want for it?"</p>
<p>Jim flashed a sharp glance at him.</p>
<p>"My old mill?" Then he laughed peculiarly.
"What do you want with that?"</p>
<p>The other considered for a moment.</p>
<p>"My mill hasn't sufficient capacity," he said at
last. "You see, my contract is urgent. It must be
completed before winter shuts down—under an
enormous penalty. We are getting a few thousand
a day behind on my calculations. Your mill will
put me right, with a margin to spare against accidents."</p>
<p>"I see." And the thoughtfulness of Truscott's
manner seemed unnecessary. He avoided Dave's
eyes. "You're under a penalty, eh? I s'pose the
government are a hard crowd to deal with?"</p>
<p>Dave nodded.</p>
<p>"If I fail it means something very like—ruin," he
said, almost as though speaking to himself.</p>
<p>Truscott whistled.</p>
<p>"Pretty dangerous, traveling so near the limit,"
he said.</p>
<p>"Yes. Well? What about the mill?"</p>
<p>"I must think it over. I'll let you know."</p>
<p>He turned and left the office without another
word, and Dave stared after him, speechless with
surprise and disgust.</p>
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